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As someone who sometimes spends a lot of time and effort answering questions on SO, I would like to see this embargo tag happen. There's no downside.

It costs SO users and moderators virtually zero effort, and the only honest people it could possibly harm are those who happen to be facing a problem that corresponds closely to a problem from a current competition. How often will that happen, really?

With Patricia Shanahan's suggestion that embargoed questions should automatically behave like just-asked questions (e.g. appear on the front page) as soon as their embargo period lapses, we have a perfect solution. This way people who inadvertently post a question from a live competition aren't punished. They don't even have to remember to ask the question again later -- all they have to do is wait a few days.

I've seen two main counterarguments, and I don't think either of them hold water:

  • "It's not our job to enforce someone else's rules." As in many other cases, those rules exist because their absence would lead to dissatisfaction for lots of honest people. Maybe it's not our job to uphold them, but since the cost of upholding them is so incredibly low, and the benefit (to programming competitions and the honest programmers who participate in them) so large, how can we justify not doing so? Let's see how that principle scales up: "I could change some entries in a config file, and poverty would disappear from the Earth. But it's not my job."
  • The idea that SO is somehow unfairly constrained by not being allowed to answer these questions. This is ludicrous. At what point did "The right to answer questions" acquire moral force sufficient to displace other concerns like "basic honesty"? Are there people out there who are running so low on questions to answer that delaying their access to these live-competition questions threatens their quality of life? Maybe someone needs to show those people the F5 key.

[EDIT]

Some examples from the last 3 days

There's a legitimate question about how often this happens. I mostly participate on the algorithms tag, which is probably where most of the programming competition questions get posted.

As someone who sometimes spends a lot of time and effort answering questions on SO, I would like to see this embargo tag happen. There's no downside.

It costs SO users and moderators virtually zero effort, and the only honest people it could possibly harm are those who happen to be facing a problem that corresponds closely to a problem from a current competition. How often will that happen, really?

With Patricia Shanahan's suggestion that embargoed questions should automatically behave like just-asked questions (e.g. appear on the front page) as soon as their embargo period lapses, we have a perfect solution. This way people who inadvertently post a question from a live competition aren't punished. They don't even have to remember to ask the question again later -- all they have to do is wait a few days.

I've seen two main counterarguments, and I don't think either of them hold water:

  • "It's not our job to enforce someone else's rules." As in many other cases, those rules exist because their absence would lead to dissatisfaction for lots of honest people. Maybe it's not our job to uphold them, but since the cost of upholding them is so incredibly low, and the benefit (to programming competitions and the honest programmers who participate in them) so large, how can we justify not doing so? Let's see how that principle scales up: "I could change some entries in a config file, and poverty would disappear from the Earth. But it's not my job."
  • The idea that SO is somehow unfairly constrained by not being allowed to answer these questions. This is ludicrous. At what point did "The right to answer questions" acquire moral force sufficient to displace other concerns like "basic honesty"? Are there people out there who are running so low on questions to answer that delaying their access to these live-competition questions threatens their quality of life? Maybe someone needs to show those people the F5 key.

[EDIT]

Some examples from the last 3 days

There's a legitimate question about how often this happens. I mostly participate on the algorithms tag, which is probably where most of the programming competition questions get posted.

As someone who sometimes spends a lot of time and effort answering questions on SO, I would like to see this embargo tag happen. There's no downside.

It costs SO users and moderators virtually zero effort, and the only honest people it could possibly harm are those who happen to be facing a problem that corresponds closely to a problem from a current competition. How often will that happen, really?

With Patricia Shanahan's suggestion that embargoed questions should automatically behave like just-asked questions (e.g. appear on the front page) as soon as their embargo period lapses, we have a perfect solution. This way people who inadvertently post a question from a live competition aren't punished. They don't even have to remember to ask the question again later -- all they have to do is wait a few days.

I've seen two main counterarguments, and I don't think either of them hold water:

  • "It's not our job to enforce someone else's rules." As in many other cases, those rules exist because their absence would lead to dissatisfaction for lots of honest people. Maybe it's not our job to uphold them, but since the cost of upholding them is so incredibly low, and the benefit (to programming competitions and the honest programmers who participate in them) so large, how can we justify not doing so? Let's see how that principle scales up: "I could change some entries in a config file, and poverty would disappear from the Earth. But it's not my job."
  • The idea that SO is somehow unfairly constrained by not being allowed to answer these questions. This is ludicrous. At what point did "The right to answer questions" acquire moral force sufficient to displace other concerns like "basic honesty"? Are there people out there who are running so low on questions to answer that delaying their access to these live-competition questions threatens their quality of life? Maybe someone needs to show those people the F5 key.

[EDIT]

Some examples from the last 3 days

There's a legitimate question about how often this happens. I mostly participate on the algorithms tag, which is probably where most of the programming competition questions get posted.

Added examples.
Source Link

As someone who sometimes spends a lot of time and effort answering questions on SO, I would like to see this embargo tag happen. There's no downside.

It costs SO users and moderators virtually zero effort, and the only honest people it could possibly harm are those who happen to be facing a problem that corresponds closely to a problem from a current competition. How often will that happen, really?

With Patricia Shanahan's suggestion that embargoed questions should automatically behave like just-asked questions (e.g. appear on the front page) as soon as their embargo period lapses, we have a perfect solution. This way people who inadvertently post a question from a live competition aren't punished. They don't even have to remember to ask the question again later -- all they have to do is wait a few days.

I've seen two main counterarguments, and I don't think either of them hold water:

  • "It's not our job to enforce someone else's rules." As in many other cases, those rules exist because their absence would lead to dissatisfaction for lots of honest people. Maybe it's not our job to uphold them, but since the cost of upholding them is so incredibly low, and the benefit (to programming competitions and the honest programmers who participate in them) so large, how can we justify not doing so? Let's see how that principle scales up: "I could change some entries in a config file, and poverty would disappear from the Earth. But it's not my job."
  • The idea that SO is somehow unfairly constrained by not being allowed to answer these questions. This is ludicrous. At what point did "The right to answer questions" acquire moral force sufficient to displace other concerns like "basic honesty"? Are there people out there who are running so low on questions to answer that delaying their access to these live-competition questions threatens their quality of life? Maybe someone needs to show those people the F5 key.

[EDIT]

Some examples from the last 3 days

There's a legitimate question about how often this happens. I mostly participate on the algorithms tag, which is probably where most of the programming competition questions get posted.

As someone who sometimes spends a lot of time and effort answering questions on SO, I would like to see this embargo tag happen. There's no downside.

It costs SO users and moderators virtually zero effort, and the only honest people it could possibly harm are those who happen to be facing a problem that corresponds closely to a problem from a current competition. How often will that happen, really?

With Patricia Shanahan's suggestion that embargoed questions should automatically behave like just-asked questions (e.g. appear on the front page) as soon as their embargo period lapses, we have a perfect solution. This way people who inadvertently post a question from a live competition aren't punished. They don't even have to remember to ask the question again later -- all they have to do is wait a few days.

I've seen two main counterarguments, and I don't think either of them hold water:

  • "It's not our job to enforce someone else's rules." As in many other cases, those rules exist because their absence would lead to dissatisfaction for lots of honest people. Maybe it's not our job to uphold them, but since the cost of upholding them is so incredibly low, and the benefit (to programming competitions and the honest programmers who participate in them) so large, how can we justify not doing so? Let's see how that principle scales up: "I could change some entries in a config file, and poverty would disappear from the Earth. But it's not my job."
  • The idea that SO is somehow unfairly constrained by not being allowed to answer these questions. This is ludicrous. At what point did "The right to answer questions" acquire moral force sufficient to displace other concerns like "basic honesty"? Are there people out there who are running so low on questions to answer that delaying their access to these live-competition questions threatens their quality of life? Maybe someone needs to show those people the F5 key.

As someone who sometimes spends a lot of time and effort answering questions on SO, I would like to see this embargo tag happen. There's no downside.

It costs SO users and moderators virtually zero effort, and the only honest people it could possibly harm are those who happen to be facing a problem that corresponds closely to a problem from a current competition. How often will that happen, really?

With Patricia Shanahan's suggestion that embargoed questions should automatically behave like just-asked questions (e.g. appear on the front page) as soon as their embargo period lapses, we have a perfect solution. This way people who inadvertently post a question from a live competition aren't punished. They don't even have to remember to ask the question again later -- all they have to do is wait a few days.

I've seen two main counterarguments, and I don't think either of them hold water:

  • "It's not our job to enforce someone else's rules." As in many other cases, those rules exist because their absence would lead to dissatisfaction for lots of honest people. Maybe it's not our job to uphold them, but since the cost of upholding them is so incredibly low, and the benefit (to programming competitions and the honest programmers who participate in them) so large, how can we justify not doing so? Let's see how that principle scales up: "I could change some entries in a config file, and poverty would disappear from the Earth. But it's not my job."
  • The idea that SO is somehow unfairly constrained by not being allowed to answer these questions. This is ludicrous. At what point did "The right to answer questions" acquire moral force sufficient to displace other concerns like "basic honesty"? Are there people out there who are running so low on questions to answer that delaying their access to these live-competition questions threatens their quality of life? Maybe someone needs to show those people the F5 key.

[EDIT]

Some examples from the last 3 days

There's a legitimate question about how often this happens. I mostly participate on the algorithms tag, which is probably where most of the programming competition questions get posted.

Source Link

As someone who sometimes spends a lot of time and effort answering questions on SO, I would like to see this embargo tag happen. There's no downside.

It costs SO users and moderators virtually zero effort, and the only honest people it could possibly harm are those who happen to be facing a problem that corresponds closely to a problem from a current competition. How often will that happen, really?

With Patricia Shanahan's suggestion that embargoed questions should automatically behave like just-asked questions (e.g. appear on the front page) as soon as their embargo period lapses, we have a perfect solution. This way people who inadvertently post a question from a live competition aren't punished. They don't even have to remember to ask the question again later -- all they have to do is wait a few days.

I've seen two main counterarguments, and I don't think either of them hold water:

  • "It's not our job to enforce someone else's rules." As in many other cases, those rules exist because their absence would lead to dissatisfaction for lots of honest people. Maybe it's not our job to uphold them, but since the cost of upholding them is so incredibly low, and the benefit (to programming competitions and the honest programmers who participate in them) so large, how can we justify not doing so? Let's see how that principle scales up: "I could change some entries in a config file, and poverty would disappear from the Earth. But it's not my job."
  • The idea that SO is somehow unfairly constrained by not being allowed to answer these questions. This is ludicrous. At what point did "The right to answer questions" acquire moral force sufficient to displace other concerns like "basic honesty"? Are there people out there who are running so low on questions to answer that delaying their access to these live-competition questions threatens their quality of life? Maybe someone needs to show those people the F5 key.