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Are expletives allowed on SE sites?

For four days, my comment here had, after the question mark, something like this: "(To tell him to fuck off might not be appropriate, though.)"
Now it's gone.

Why did someone edit my comment and remove that?

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Just for reference, only moderators can edit comments. This was not done by another user. – The Establishment Jun 1 '11 at 12:06
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I think this leads down to the old discussion. – Garden Gnobobby Jun 1 '11 at 12:08
@Cody: That I assumed. – sbi Jun 1 '11 at 12:08
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@sbi: The short answer is that it got flagged as offensive. Rather than seeing the entire comment removed by further flags, I opted to remove the (parenthetical and unnecessary) expletive. I don't think my edit changed the meaning of your comment. – Bill the Lizard Jun 1 '11 at 13:13
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@Bill If he's not a mod, he can't edit his comment at this point, no? – Anna Lear Jun 1 '11 at 13:50
@Anna: Shoot, I thought users could edit their own comments! (But I verified that this is not the case on a site where I'm not a mod.) Thanks, I'll edit my comment. – Bill the Lizard Jun 1 '11 at 14:03
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closed as exact duplicate by Marc Gravell Jun 1 '11 at 12:33

This question covers exactly the same ground as earlier questions on this topic; its answers may be merged with another identical question. See the FAQ for guidance on how to improve it.

1 Answer

Your comment got edited because profanity is not acceptable regardless of the reason. See Are expletives allowed on SE sites?

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Where is that ruling? I've used profanity (with good reason) on English.SE. And I've seen profanity on other SE sites, including SO. Don't make up rules. – TRiG Jun 1 '11 at 12:06
You gotta be kidding me. Read that sentence again. It said "not appropriate". – sbi Jun 1 '11 at 12:07
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@sbi, all you have to do is say, "your comment isn't appropriate" – Aaron Fleming Jun 1 '11 at 12:10
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@TRiG, I didn't make this up – Aaron Fleming Jun 1 '11 at 12:13
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@TRiG @sbi there is nothing new here; we try to keep the sites reasonably civilised. I wasn't involved, but I fully support the edit. – Marc Gravell Jun 1 '11 at 12:20
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@Marc: The comment got edited because it told the OP not to say "fuck off" to his client, how isn't that reasonably civilised? – Xeo Jun 1 '11 at 12:22
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@Marc: That's absurd. I've been to the US, lived there, met Merkin's all over the world. How many programmers do you know who get along one whole week without saying "fuck" at least once? And this is a programmer site here, and not an old ladies' stitch and bitch club. And don't give me that "polite company" bovine excrements, I bet your coworkers are polite. – sbi Jun 1 '11 at 12:26
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@sbi - I'm not sure on the relevance of geography. And I'm not sure of the relevance of instructing someone to vs to not. It was still unnecessary – Marc Gravell Jun 1 '11 at 12:29
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@sbi - would you walk up to a new client and say that? your mother? a random passer-by? Silly rules... that would be what we call "society". – Marc Gravell Jun 1 '11 at 12:32
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@Marc, regarding "society"... well said +1 – Aaron Fleming Jun 1 '11 at 12:33
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@Marc: The swear word used around here is "shit", not "fuck" (how could making love ever become an expletive?), and yes, I say this when my mother's around, and I have heard her using it, too (though not oftener than once/decade). As for "random passers": If I'm among programmers (remember, this is not a website for old ladies, but for programmers), and something calls for swearing, people will use "fuck". I've heard it at a software conference, when people had trouble with network connectivity, and I've heard a (renowned) speaker say it when his beamer died during a software talk. So what? – sbi Jun 1 '11 at 12:41
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@sbi, so an old lady can't be a programmer? Just because you don't find a word, or the use of a set of words, offensive, that doesn't mean others won't. You can't know who will read content on stackoverflow, it's on the internet thing, so it's available to people of all ages, the world over. It's been pointed out to you that the stackoverflow community don't accept, or appreciate, cussing/swearing, so either stop doing it (no matter how humorously meant!) or expect to have it edited out and the ban hammer eventually drop on you from a great height. – Rob Jun 1 '11 at 12:44
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Methinks it's a little silly to ban so-called expletives simply because they might offend someone. There are lots of other (arguably more effective) ways to offend people in comments, but we don't have any way of banning those. Because they're not words at all, they're phrases and ideas, you know, the things that actually have the tendency to harm. Of course, they also have the tendency to be very good and useful; open discourse is something a site like this one is based almost solely around. If @sbi wants to offend people with his word choice, I say let him. And blame him, not the site. – The Establishment Jun 1 '11 at 12:53
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@Mike: But that's just it: I wasn't "not nice" to anybody. The only one who could have been offended would be that silly guy's customer. (And even that would be construed, because I didn't even actually use that phrase, I merely said to not to use it on him.) It was not that I offended someone; someone felt offended by me referring to a phrase with an expletive in it. That's very different from me using the phrase on some SO user. – sbi Jun 1 '11 at 13:03
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Can't we bypass the argument about whether or not certain words offend and whom they might offend. It all boils down to the rule set out in the FAQ that expletives are unacceptable. Think of it as an arbitrary rule: we don't know why, we just know we can't do it. – pavium Jun 1 '11 at 13:16
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