| bio | website | shog9.com |
|---|---|---|
| location | Not looking over your shoulder | |
| age | 33 | |
| visits | member for | 3 years, 10 months |
| seen | 49 mins ago | |
| stats | profile views | 8,758 |
Poke...
- Community Manager for Stack Exchange, Inc.
- Email-accessible: shog@stackoverflow.com
- Self-absorbed process wonk
- Tilting slightly to the right
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Jul 18 |
comment |
Limits for self-promotion in answers @Ira: The folks providing answers for free that allows SO to sell advertising accept that such advertising is the cost of having a well-run place to trade answers; it's been a part of the site since its inception, and those who aren't comfortable with it are under no obligation to post here. Piggy-backing the promotion of your own products on the popularity wrought by other users is another matter entirely, but I have as little hope of convincing you of this as the good folks on USENET had of convincing Canter and Seigel that flooding the system with offers of paid legal aid was in poor taste. |
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Jul 17 |
comment |
Limits for self-promotion in answers @Grace: I'm saying it's a red-herring. This has nothing to do with commercial vs. non-commercial software - I've promoted commercial software in answers, just not software I make money off of. It's also not about self-promotional answers occasionally being useful: of course they're useful, some of the time, for some small percentage of users - if spam didn't work (find its target), it wouldn't be a problem because no one would bother posting it! This is a case of a user abusing the popularity of the site to promote his own business - everything else is just a distraction. |
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Jul 17 |
comment |
Limits for self-promotion in answers Pekka, I think your heart is in the right place, but... This should not be necessary. You're effectively setting up guidelines for targeted advertising on SO - and there's already a system in place for that. One or two self-promoting answers out of 100 might be called a misunderstanding; 400+ is a blatant attempt to get around paying for your ads, and deserves neither sympathy nor "clarification". |
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Jul 17 |
answered | Limits for self-promotion in answers |
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Jul 16 |
comment |
Threading view in chat? I suspect Google Wave will be the Workplace Shell of communication systems... Others grabbing bits and pieces for years to come but never fully grasping the underlying vision. |
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Jul 16 |
answered | Concerted Efforts to Close “Hidden Features of X Language” Type of Question |
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Jul 15 |
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How about an Offensive Allowed rating on the rooms heh... I down-voted it because I think it's unnecessary. Go figure... ;-) |
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Jul 14 |
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How about an Offensive Allowed rating on the rooms Wait, which part of SO is the equivalent of a three-star restaurant now? |
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Jul 14 |
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How about an Offensive Allowed rating on the rooms @Kev: a fourth place? Whoah... |
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Jul 14 |
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How about an Offensive Allowed rating on the rooms @devinb: AFAIK, you can create a room and limit participants to those you know and trust, right? @Pekka: I think it's safe to say, if you choose to leave a Welbog chat room open on your desktop at work, you deserve whatever reputation you get as a result... |
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Jul 14 |
answered | How about an Offensive Allowed rating on the rooms |
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Jul 13 |
answered | Should there be a way to differentiate answers that directly address the question vs. providing a better way to solve the problem? |
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Jul 13 |
answered | Can we prevent some of the low-quality questions from entering our system? |
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Jul 13 |
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Can we prevent some of the low-quality questions from entering our system? 1&2 sound great. Not wild about more badges though. #5 is key. |
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Jul 13 |
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Can we prevent some of the low-quality questions from entering our system? @Joel: well, my opinion is that sacrificing a group of users because of a determined bad apple is fine, so long as it's intentional... And I guess, cutting off a group because multiple members of that group are all behaving badly is ok too... |
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Jul 13 |
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Can we prevent some of the low-quality questions from entering our system? Combine this with the "visible to the user[s IP address] and no one else" idea, and I think it's a winner. If a user does nothing, his crap question eventually shows up, gets down-voted, and the delay continues; if he re-posts, then that'll get delayed and down-voted as well; if he sits down and edits his question into shape, then it doesn't get the down-votes and the delay goes away; if he deletes it and goes away, then the problem leaves with him. |
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Jul 13 |
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Can we prevent some of the low-quality questions from entering our system? I think escalating responses are gonna be the life-saver here... And if one user manages to post enough crap, fast enough, to get their whole office / school / 3rd-world sweatshop/country banned, then arousing the anger of their compatriots might work in our favor. |
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Jul 10 |
awarded | Good Answer |
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Jul 9 |
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What aspects of psychology does Stack Overflow take advantage of? I donno... Pretty sure there are at least a few forms of participation that would qualify as "excretion"... |
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Jul 8 |
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Should 'Hi', 'thanks,' taglines, and salutations be removed from posts? @Jon: Eh, it's something to point to when folks whine about it. There have been a couple of questions closed as duplicates of this, and I've actually seen at least one person using the URL as their "revision comment" while performing editing. Ultimately though, it serves the same primary purpose as most of the "etiquette" posts on Meta: get the discussion done with so we don't have to repeat it every week... |