Skip to main content

Timeline for How to assert a bad question

Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0

13 events
when toggle format what by license comment
Jan 18, 2021 at 12:03 history edited CommunityBot
replaced http://blog.stackoverflow.com with https://blog.stackoverflow.com
May 23, 2017 at 12:38 history edited CommunityBot
replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
Oct 3, 2014 at 19:26 comment added HostileFork says dont trust SE @JoshCaswell Right...it's not the closing...but getting irritated about being reversed and not feeling a decent enough thing resulted from it. Asking what is so fascinating about the question--as if a question has to be "fascinating" to be on the site or justify a community disagreeing with a unilateral action. The reaction errs on being "in the spirit" of moderation...and that's the only "serious" thing, to the extent that The Internet is Serious Business at the end of the day.
Oct 3, 2014 at 19:09 comment added jscs I was surprised to see Robert bring this up on Meta as well, because by the time I saw the question it seemed reasonable, but I think you're digging a little too deep to make this a serious case of mod power abuse. Note especially that the revision Robert was looking at when he closed it was all but certainly the second; the timestamps of the close vote and Deduplicator's second edit (which you've linked as "edited to be coherent" -- and I agree that the question is pretty clear at that point) are about 30 seconds apart.
Oct 3, 2014 at 17:12 history edited HostileFork says dont trust SE CC BY-SA 3.0
explain this is about moderators closing, not voting to close
Oct 3, 2014 at 17:04 comment added HostileFork says dont trust SE @Servy Edited my answer to show it had been edited, and it was closed anyway at that time. I'm going to stick with saying this was a bad close, the community agrees, and I hope more attention is drawn to this issue...because there are real problems for moderators to tend to, instead of complaining to meta when they are overruled for crossing the line in unilateral application of close-power. Their one vote does it, and that's a higher bar than those who are just voting with others. More benefit-of-the-doubting-yourself.
Oct 3, 2014 at 17:01 history edited HostileFork says dont trust SE CC BY-SA 3.0
mention state of question at time of closing.
Oct 3, 2014 at 16:54 comment added Servy Then your definition is not in line with the site guidelines. You're using the definition of what should be deleted to determine what should be closed, while the two are radically different. If a question is unclear because the author is having trouble expressing themselves then the question isn't a good question and it is very important that it be closed as soon as possible. That doesn't mean you need to stop there, it means that if you feel the question can be improved you should take the time to clarify the question, improve it such that it's not ambiguous, and then answer it.
Oct 3, 2014 at 16:49 comment added HostileFork says dont trust SE @Servy I define "bad" as off topic--not as "written by someone who isn't an English native speaker and is having a hard time expressing themselves". "You aren't speaking English well" is not a close reason and shouldn't become one. I see a lot of actual bad questions and tell people why they are bad in comments. This wasn't a "bad" question under my definition. Should I flag your comment for not knowing how to use the word ironic? Should we give people some leeway? Do you want to live in the world where we don't?
Oct 3, 2014 at 16:48 comment added Servy And the fact that it's improvable is what means that it has a decent shot of being reopened if it is in fact improved. Closing a question doesn't mean that it cannot possibly become a good question. Closing a question means that it's not a good question right now. When a question cannot become a good question you delete it. You are asserting that we should be keeping bad questions open right in the comment that you're saying you didn't say that. How ironic.
Oct 3, 2014 at 16:44 comment added HostileFork says dont trust SE @Servy Where did I say "keep a bad question open"? I said a reasonable question which may have quality issues but can be improved. This is an example. I understood it, and several other people did. Was it well written? No. Was it somewhat ambiguous and our guesses might be wrong? Perhaps. But "question isn't perfect" isn't a good close reason. This was fine and quickly improvable. Robert thought it worth complaining on meta that people besides the OP improved it because they understood it and reopened...and he considers it effort wasted on the OP. Others, including me, disagree.
Oct 3, 2014 at 16:41 comment added Servy You should not keep a question open just because it might possibly be editable into an acceptable question. If the question, in its current state, doesn't meet the standard, then it should be closed. If it gets fixed up, it can be reopened, but it shouldn't be open until that actually happens.
Oct 3, 2014 at 16:29 history answered HostileFork says dont trust SE CC BY-SA 3.0