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Snark Overflow
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Mar 27 |
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Drive-by downvoting on open source ads (1h 2013) @Asad, I don't know, I thought about it and I figure if nobody else cares, why should I? Whichever project has the most developers who are willing to pull this stunt should be able to reduce ad rotation to just their ad (and maybe Vim) without too much trouble. Will be interested to see how it turns out. |
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Mar 27 |
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Drive-by downvoting on open source ads (1h 2013) @AndrewGrimm, common sense. All of the ads but one got exactly one downvote within a very short period of time. There was no overlap (no ads got downvoted twice in that time). If someone were too look into this, I'm confident they would find that all of those votes came from the same source. Sure, there's a chance it was all a massive coincidence, but it would just take one person to check it out. There's a distinct pattern here, and I thought I was doing the right thing by reporting it. |
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Mar 27 |
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Drive-by downvoting on open source ads (1h 2013) @Asad, and that gives the advantage to whoever acts in bad faith. Great system. |
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Mar 27 |
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Drive-by downvoting on open source ads (1h 2013) @Yannis, if everyone did that we wouldn't see any ads at all (well, maybe just a Vim ad). Surely that's not the goal here; what would be the point of starting that thread in the first place? |
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Mar 27 |
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Drive-by downvoting on open source ads (1h 2013) Perhaps you can think of another reason? I'll wait. |
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Mar 27 |
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Drive-by downvoting on open source ads (1h 2013) @Yannis but maybe his friend does? Anyway, now it's even. Can you honestly think of another reason everything would have been downvoted at the same time except for one project, other than to promote that one project? |
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Mar 27 |
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Drive-by downvoting on open source ads (1h 2013) @Asad, fine, I'll sink to his level since nobody seems to mind. |
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Mar 27 |
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Drive-by downvoting on open source ads (1h 2013) @Asad, again, I'm not talking about coming up with a generalized rule, I'm talking about dealing with a specific case. Why can't things like this be handled as-needed without making a rule for everything? |
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Mar 27 |
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Drive-by downvoting on open source ads (1h 2013) We're not talking about some kind of ethereal general case here, we're talking about a specific case where it's abundantly clear what's going on. |
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Mar 27 |
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Drive-by downvoting on open source ads (1h 2013) See the accepted response to meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/22771/… -- "The best way to stop this is to flag instances of possible tactical downvoting to be investigated by the team." That seems to indicate that it should be investigated and, I assume, dealt with. |
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Mar 27 |
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Drive-by downvoting on open source ads (1h 2013) Why does this logic not apply to serial voting then? And if this is really the case, how should it be handled... get a bunch of people to downvote the offending ad? |
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Mar 27 |
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Drive-by downvoting on open source ads (1h 2013) Doesn't this amount to "tactical downvoting?" Isn't that disallowed just like serial downvoting? |
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Mar 26 |
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Why is this question “not a real question”? @RobertHarvey, and here I thought you wanted to avoid arguing pedantically. ;) I assume the "problem" he was referring to is the fact that without a file extension, associations break under Windows. I edited it so it contains the gist of what he was saying in that last paragraph as neutrally as possible, without sounding "problematic." |
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Mar 26 |
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Why is this question “not a real question”? @GeorgeStocker, yeah, somehow I missed that it wasn't directly tied to programming until I read kiamlaluno's answer. I think you might have misunderstood my comment, though... it's not the fact that it's a Windows-specific question that I think might annoy people, it's the implicit subtext that the Windows way of doing things is the only way... sort of like saying to a Muslim "why is the football game on Sunday, that's annoying, that's when people go to church." |
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Mar 26 |
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Why is this question “not a real question”? +1, nice to see an answer that makes sense. It's sort of tangentially related to programming since he's noticing it in software projects, but not directly. |
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Mar 26 |
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Why is this question “not a real question”? @GeorgeStocker no, I wouldn't guess that? That's my guess and I'm sticking to it. ;) What's your guess? |
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Mar 26 |
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Why is this question “not a real question”? Looks good, thanks. I went ahead and re-added most of the last paragraph; it's certainly true in Gnome and KDE. You can remove the file extension of, for example, a .png file, the image thumbnail will display in the file manager, and double-clicking will open it in the associated program for that MIME type. File extension is only used if it's present, otherwise, the "magic bytes" are used. |
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Mar 26 |
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Why is this question “not a real question”? I didn't want to start an argument, I was going to edit the answer to fix whatever the problem was. I guess if you just want to call it speculation without backing it up, that's fine too. |
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Mar 26 |
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Why is this question “not a real question”? I'm not sure what you mean, can you expand on that? What was he speculating about? Everything he says about how files are generally named, loaded, etc. in *nix systems seems accurate. Are you saying that because he said Windows "forces" file extensions (an exaggeration, I agree) his whole answer automatically becomes speculation and falls apart? (Ed: last paragraph looks good to me too) |
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Mar 26 |
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Why is this question “not a real question”? What would you say would be a better way to word that? Maybe a legacy of "assuming" files have an extension? Aside from that bit, I'm still curious what parts you think are speculation. |

