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visits member for 3 years, 10 months
seen May 16 at 15:46
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Mar
11
comment Searching on Board and Card Games is broken
Seems to be fixed now.
Feb
28
comment Are Stack Exchange 2.0 sites remaining in beta for too long?
...in beta after over a year of work. You should check out Board and Card Games. We've been in Beta for 2.4 years!
Feb
25
comment Adding GitHub projects to Careers is broken
@Toby Allen - It's a meta meme.
Feb
15
comment Can we have an unambiguous, official ruling on what the “not an answer” flag is for?
My second point is that while your example is clear, many real-world examples are not. At all. Which puts a lot of trust, by the community, in the moderator's decision. In the example I provided, there have now been two upvotes. Another subject expert has also commented that he believes the answer is valuable. This was a situation in which the 'other' flag was used (the second time). So: what if I'd deleted the answer? It seems reasonable enough (flagger is an expert, and the OP). But the community, it turns out, disagrees. That's why I, as a mod, shouldn't have this right.
Feb
15
comment Can we have an unambiguous, official ruling on what the “not an answer” flag is for?
My point here is that the mechanism already exists to deal with these cases. Moderation should be for exceptional situations. This is not exceptional.
Feb
15
comment Can we have an unambiguous, official ruling on what the “not an answer” flag is for?
it doesn't matter that the person intended to answer the question if in fact they didn't. You provide a nice example, and clearly the answer isn't valuable. But does that mean it should be deleted by a mod? It will be downvoted. It will be placed at the bottom of the screen. It will grey out if it gets downvoted enough. The answerer may eventually delete it himself, to spare the embarrassment, avoid further downvotes, and get a badge. If it stays, it will point out something that isn't helpful, but which at least one person thought was.
Feb
15
comment Can we have an unambiguous, official ruling on what the “not an answer” flag is for?
discuss with your fellow moderators... - ironic in this instance, as the user doing the flagging, as well as being the OP and presumably a subject expert, was in fact a previous pro tempore moderator for the site. It sounds like you're saying my opinion is more correct because I happen to be the (unelected, pro tempore) moderator now - which doesn't make much sense to me.
Feb
14
comment Can we have an unambiguous, official ruling on what the “not an answer” flag is for?
Take a look at Bart's popular comment above. "Anything which a moderator can judge not to be an answer, without having to look at the actual question asked." Why is this attractive? Because there's no moderator subjectivity involved. Can't tell without reading the question? Then leave it. As a mod, this guarantees you can't egregiously act on something you really shouldn't have. Any thoughts?
Feb
14
comment Can we have an unambiguous, official ruling on what the “not an answer” flag is for?
I'm not confused. I'm looking for some precision, which hasn't been forthcoming so far. I guess I'm not being clear enough. Tangential answers. What are these? In my specific example, the OP provided extra information in a custom flag reason. He presented technical evidence that the answer was worthless. As a moderator, am I supposed to judge this evidence somehow? If so, how? Using my experience of the subject area? In other words, as an ordinary user? If so, why would my user experience give me authorisation to take a moderation action (deletion)?
Feb
14
comment Can we have an unambiguous, official ruling on what the “not an answer” flag is for?
@Robert Harvey - I understand, but I think this conflates two separate roles. Many expert users might feel the same way about this downvoted answer. But they can't just delete it. You can, but only because you are a moderator. Should you? I say, only if it makes sense from a moderation perspective. The reason this matters is that otherwise, you open yourself to user privilege escalation by proxy. Annoyed experts will flag you to point out things that "should be deleted". Sometimes you will agree. Too much power! This is a slippery slope.
Feb
14
comment Can we have an unambiguous, official ruling on what the “not an answer” flag is for?
@Bart - I like that description. If only it was official/consensus...
Feb
14
comment Can we have an unambiguous, official ruling on what the “not an answer” flag is for?
It's the I reserve the right as a moderator to delete the answer anyway part that I'm most interested in. As a moderation best practice, is that a right that I should indeed reserve? I believe it isn't. It's a value judgement, on the post's perceived worth. As a moderator, why do I have the right to make that call?
Feb
1
comment Are revenge (non serial) down votes allowed?
If you suspect someone specific, you can detect it by going to their profile and looking for the -1 they just sustained. It could be coincidence, but...
Jan
30
comment Timeline should show user names associated with opening and closing
This lack of usernames is also evident in the comments. Perhaps the two are related?
Jan
23
comment Anyone aware of a .sql version of the Stack Exchange data dump?
It's far more universal a format than CSV - don't you mean 'than XML'?
Jan
18
comment Duplicate asking to explain chunk of code, with more than 400 upvotes, was deleted
Such a high quality answer should have been merged with the identified duplicate, rather than deleted, IMHO.
Jan
18
comment How to get rid of CiteHistory crap?
That request linked by @Brad Larson should be implemented. Reading through the discussion, in 2013, there is now not a single good reason for link shorteners to be allowed on SE sites.
Jan
17
comment Are we creating too many different Stack Exchange sites?
I think all this is saying is that the tag system is not sophisticated enough (which I agree with). I think the second paragraph is just wrong. You'll still get expert answers on Fortran on SO, even though it's a niche tag. People follow the tags in which they have expertise or interest.
Jan
14
comment How can I safely ask for a language comparison?
See also the discussion here.
Jan
14
comment How can I safely ask for a language comparison?
@Servy - I think the questioner isn't clear on what question he has. He has posed the meta question in completely general terms. I find it unlikely that the true question he needs to ask is as unconstrained as is implied here.