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replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
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There's no problem with anyone providing an honest-to-goodness testimonial for something that they've used, and feel confident recommending to someone else, provided that they're actually answering a question by doing so and doing it in good faith.

On Stack Overflow, questions that would invite this sort of thing are rarely asked in a manner that fits within our on-topic guidelines. This is part of the reason why we don't really entertain any kind of recommendation questions on a site that size - it's just too difficult to police.

We do thoroughly investigate abnormal numbers of links to something appearing in an odd period of time (quite easy to turn up, and Stack Overflow never sleeps). You could have 5k, 10k, 20k or even 350k - if we catch someone obviously astroturfing (for fun or profit) - mods won't hesitate to initiate a lengthy timed suspension or worse. It's very common for us to run queries on our live database while supporting moderators that are chasing down something that just doesn't smell right.

If someone approaches you with an offer to plant links on our site, please contact uscontact us and let us know. We'd much rather reach out to an organization before it comes to this and help them understand our self-promotion guidelines.

The key things any company needs to pay attention to:

  • Only a small percentage of your posts should promote your product (note, merely supportingsupporting folks by answering programming questions about your product is not considered promotion, but don't 'seed' questions, the community will catch that quickly).
  • You should establish yourself by providing useful answers that don't mention your product prior to doing anything else
  • You should clearly disclose your affiliation with any product you mention in the course of making a recommendation to someone
  • If asked to stop, stop. You'll just have to live with the fact that you can't do what you want to do.
  • Our advertising rates are quite reasonable. Did I mention that you should reach out to us?
  • Continuing to try to link to your stuff after being asked to stop can and will result in your developers not being able to use the site at all. Don't do it.
  • Never, ever create accounts for the sole purpose of elevating the posts left by other accounts. That's a great way to end up in our blacklist, so that no one can link to your site.

In fact, you're welcome to link to this answer should you receive anything like that in the future, after letting the other party know the account you've worked very hard at making shiny just isn't worth whatever they might be offering.

There's no problem with anyone providing an honest-to-goodness testimonial for something that they've used, and feel confident recommending to someone else, provided that they're actually answering a question by doing so and doing it in good faith.

On Stack Overflow, questions that would invite this sort of thing are rarely asked in a manner that fits within our on-topic guidelines. This is part of the reason why we don't really entertain any kind of recommendation questions on a site that size - it's just too difficult to police.

We do thoroughly investigate abnormal numbers of links to something appearing in an odd period of time (quite easy to turn up, and Stack Overflow never sleeps). You could have 5k, 10k, 20k or even 350k - if we catch someone obviously astroturfing (for fun or profit) - mods won't hesitate to initiate a lengthy timed suspension or worse. It's very common for us to run queries on our live database while supporting moderators that are chasing down something that just doesn't smell right.

If someone approaches you with an offer to plant links on our site, please contact us and let us know. We'd much rather reach out to an organization before it comes to this and help them understand our self-promotion guidelines.

The key things any company needs to pay attention to:

  • Only a small percentage of your posts should promote your product (note, merely supporting folks by answering programming questions about your product is not considered promotion, but don't 'seed' questions, the community will catch that quickly).
  • You should establish yourself by providing useful answers that don't mention your product prior to doing anything else
  • You should clearly disclose your affiliation with any product you mention in the course of making a recommendation to someone
  • If asked to stop, stop. You'll just have to live with the fact that you can't do what you want to do.
  • Our advertising rates are quite reasonable. Did I mention that you should reach out to us?
  • Continuing to try to link to your stuff after being asked to stop can and will result in your developers not being able to use the site at all. Don't do it.
  • Never, ever create accounts for the sole purpose of elevating the posts left by other accounts. That's a great way to end up in our blacklist, so that no one can link to your site.

In fact, you're welcome to link to this answer should you receive anything like that in the future, after letting the other party know the account you've worked very hard at making shiny just isn't worth whatever they might be offering.

There's no problem with anyone providing an honest-to-goodness testimonial for something that they've used, and feel confident recommending to someone else, provided that they're actually answering a question by doing so and doing it in good faith.

On Stack Overflow, questions that would invite this sort of thing are rarely asked in a manner that fits within our on-topic guidelines. This is part of the reason why we don't really entertain any kind of recommendation questions on a site that size - it's just too difficult to police.

We do thoroughly investigate abnormal numbers of links to something appearing in an odd period of time (quite easy to turn up, and Stack Overflow never sleeps). You could have 5k, 10k, 20k or even 350k - if we catch someone obviously astroturfing (for fun or profit) - mods won't hesitate to initiate a lengthy timed suspension or worse. It's very common for us to run queries on our live database while supporting moderators that are chasing down something that just doesn't smell right.

If someone approaches you with an offer to plant links on our site, please contact us and let us know. We'd much rather reach out to an organization before it comes to this and help them understand our self-promotion guidelines.

The key things any company needs to pay attention to:

  • Only a small percentage of your posts should promote your product (note, merely supporting folks by answering programming questions about your product is not considered promotion, but don't 'seed' questions, the community will catch that quickly).
  • You should establish yourself by providing useful answers that don't mention your product prior to doing anything else
  • You should clearly disclose your affiliation with any product you mention in the course of making a recommendation to someone
  • If asked to stop, stop. You'll just have to live with the fact that you can't do what you want to do.
  • Our advertising rates are quite reasonable. Did I mention that you should reach out to us?
  • Continuing to try to link to your stuff after being asked to stop can and will result in your developers not being able to use the site at all. Don't do it.
  • Never, ever create accounts for the sole purpose of elevating the posts left by other accounts. That's a great way to end up in our blacklist, so that no one can link to your site.

In fact, you're welcome to link to this answer should you receive anything like that in the future, after letting the other party know the account you've worked very hard at making shiny just isn't worth whatever they might be offering.

misuse of "disclaim"
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Andriy M
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There's no problem with anyone providing an honest-to-goodness testimonial for something that they've used, and feel confident recommending to someone else, provided that they're actually answering a question by doing so and doing it in good faith.

On Stack Overflow, questions that would invite this sort of thing are rarely asked in a manner that fits within our on-topic guidelines. This is part of the reason why we don't really entertain any kind of recommendation questions on a site that size - it's just too difficult to police.

We do thoroughly investigate abnormal numbers of links to something appearing in an odd period of time (quite easy to turn up, and Stack Overflow never sleeps). You could have 5k, 10k, 20k or even 350k - if we catch someone obviously astroturfing (for fun or profit) - mods won't hesitate to initiate a lengthy timed suspension or worse. It's very common for us to run queries on our live database while supporting moderators that are chasing down something that just doesn't smell right.

If someone approaches you with an offer to plant links on our site, please contact us and let us know. We'd much rather reach out to an organization before it comes to this and help them understand our self-promotion guidelines.

The key things any company needs to pay attention to:

  • Only a small percentage of your posts should promote your product (note, merely supporting folks by answering programming questions about your product is not considered promotion, but don't 'seed' questions, the community will catch that quickly).
  • You should establish yourself by providing useful answers that don't mention your product prior to doing anything else
  • You should clearly disclaimdisclose your affiliation with any product you mention in the course of making a recommendation to someone
  • If asked to stop, stop. You'll just have to live with the fact that you can't do what you want to do.
  • Our advertising rates are quite reasonable. Did I mention that you should reach out to us?
  • Continuing to try to link to your stuff after being asked to stop can and will result in your developers not being able to use the site at all. Don't do it.
  • Never, ever create accounts for the sole purpose of elevating the posts left by other accounts. That's a great way to end up in our blacklist, so that no one can link to your site.

In fact, you're welcome to link to this answer should you receive anything like that in the future, after letting the other party know the account you've worked very hard at making shiny just isn't worth whatever they might be offering.

There's no problem with anyone providing an honest-to-goodness testimonial for something that they've used, and feel confident recommending to someone else, provided that they're actually answering a question by doing so and doing it in good faith.

On Stack Overflow, questions that would invite this sort of thing are rarely asked in a manner that fits within our on-topic guidelines. This is part of the reason why we don't really entertain any kind of recommendation questions on a site that size - it's just too difficult to police.

We do thoroughly investigate abnormal numbers of links to something appearing in an odd period of time (quite easy to turn up, and Stack Overflow never sleeps). You could have 5k, 10k, 20k or even 350k - if we catch someone obviously astroturfing (for fun or profit) - mods won't hesitate to initiate a lengthy timed suspension or worse. It's very common for us to run queries on our live database while supporting moderators that are chasing down something that just doesn't smell right.

If someone approaches you with an offer to plant links on our site, please contact us and let us know. We'd much rather reach out to an organization before it comes to this and help them understand our self-promotion guidelines.

The key things any company needs to pay attention to:

  • Only a small percentage of your posts should promote your product (note, merely supporting folks by answering programming questions about your product is not considered promotion, but don't 'seed' questions, the community will catch that quickly).
  • You should establish yourself by providing useful answers that don't mention your product prior to doing anything else
  • You should clearly disclaim your affiliation with any product you mention in the course of making a recommendation to someone
  • If asked to stop, stop. You'll just have to live with the fact that you can't do what you want to do.
  • Our advertising rates are quite reasonable. Did I mention that you should reach out to us?
  • Continuing to try to link to your stuff after being asked to stop can and will result in your developers not being able to use the site at all. Don't do it.
  • Never, ever create accounts for the sole purpose of elevating the posts left by other accounts. That's a great way to end up in our blacklist, so that no one can link to your site.

In fact, you're welcome to link to this answer should you receive anything like that in the future, after letting the other party know the account you've worked very hard at making shiny just isn't worth whatever they might be offering.

There's no problem with anyone providing an honest-to-goodness testimonial for something that they've used, and feel confident recommending to someone else, provided that they're actually answering a question by doing so and doing it in good faith.

On Stack Overflow, questions that would invite this sort of thing are rarely asked in a manner that fits within our on-topic guidelines. This is part of the reason why we don't really entertain any kind of recommendation questions on a site that size - it's just too difficult to police.

We do thoroughly investigate abnormal numbers of links to something appearing in an odd period of time (quite easy to turn up, and Stack Overflow never sleeps). You could have 5k, 10k, 20k or even 350k - if we catch someone obviously astroturfing (for fun or profit) - mods won't hesitate to initiate a lengthy timed suspension or worse. It's very common for us to run queries on our live database while supporting moderators that are chasing down something that just doesn't smell right.

If someone approaches you with an offer to plant links on our site, please contact us and let us know. We'd much rather reach out to an organization before it comes to this and help them understand our self-promotion guidelines.

The key things any company needs to pay attention to:

  • Only a small percentage of your posts should promote your product (note, merely supporting folks by answering programming questions about your product is not considered promotion, but don't 'seed' questions, the community will catch that quickly).
  • You should establish yourself by providing useful answers that don't mention your product prior to doing anything else
  • You should clearly disclose your affiliation with any product you mention in the course of making a recommendation to someone
  • If asked to stop, stop. You'll just have to live with the fact that you can't do what you want to do.
  • Our advertising rates are quite reasonable. Did I mention that you should reach out to us?
  • Continuing to try to link to your stuff after being asked to stop can and will result in your developers not being able to use the site at all. Don't do it.
  • Never, ever create accounts for the sole purpose of elevating the posts left by other accounts. That's a great way to end up in our blacklist, so that no one can link to your site.

In fact, you're welcome to link to this answer should you receive anything like that in the future, after letting the other party know the account you've worked very hard at making shiny just isn't worth whatever they might be offering.

added 29 characters in body
Source Link
user50049
user50049

There's no problem with anyone providing an honest-to-goodness testimonial for something that they've used, and feel confident recommending to someone else, provided that they're actually answering a question by doing so and doing it in good faith.

On Stack Overflow, questions that would invite this sort of thing are rarely asked in a manner that fits within our on-topic guidelines. This is part of the reason why we don't really entertain any kind of recommendation questions on a site that size - it's just too difficult to police.

We do thoroughly investigate abnormal numbers of links to something appearing in an odd period of time (quite easy to turn up, and Stack Overflow never sleeps). You could have 5k, 10k, 20k or even 350k - if we catch someone obviously astroturfing (for fun or profit) - mods won't hesitate to initiate a lengthy timed suspension or worse. It's very common for us to run queries on our live database while supporting moderators that are chasing down something that just doesn't smell right.

If someone approaches you with an offer to plant links on our site, please contact us and let us know. We'd much rather reach out to an organization before it comes to this and help them understand our self-promotion guidelines.

The key things any company needs to pay attention to:

  • Only a small percentage of your posts should promote your product (note, merely supporting folks by answering programming questions about your product is not considered promotion, but don't 'seed' questions, the community will catch that quickly).
  • You should establish yourself by providing useful answers that don't mention your product prior to doing anything else
  • You should clearly disclaim your affiliation with any product you mention in the course of making a recommendation to someone
  • If asked to stop, stop. You'll just have to live with the fact that you can't do what you want to do.
  • Our advertising rates are quite reasonable. Did I mention that you should reach out to us?
  • Continuing to try to link to your stuff after being asked to stop can and will result in your developers not being able to use the site at all. Don't do it.
  • Never, ever create accounts for the sole purpose of elevating the posts left by other accounts. That's a great way to end up in our blacklist, so that no one can link to your site.

In fact, you're welcome to link to this answer should you receive anything like that in the future, after letting the other party know the account you've worked very hard at making shiny just isn't worth whatever they might be offering.

There's no problem with anyone providing an honest-to-goodness testimonial for something that they've used, and feel confident recommending to someone else, provided that they're actually answering a question by doing so.

On Stack Overflow, questions that would invite this sort of thing are rarely asked in a manner that fits within our on-topic guidelines. This is part of the reason why we don't really entertain any kind of recommendation questions on a site that size - it's just too difficult to police.

We do thoroughly investigate abnormal numbers of links to something appearing in an odd period of time (quite easy to turn up, and Stack Overflow never sleeps). You could have 5k, 10k, 20k or even 350k - if we catch someone obviously astroturfing (for fun or profit) - mods won't hesitate to initiate a lengthy timed suspension or worse. It's very common for us to run queries on our live database while supporting moderators that are chasing down something that just doesn't smell right.

If someone approaches you with an offer to plant links on our site, please contact us and let us know. We'd much rather reach out to an organization before it comes to this and help them understand our self-promotion guidelines.

The key things any company needs to pay attention to:

  • Only a small percentage of your posts should promote your product (note, merely supporting folks by answering programming questions about your product is not considered promotion, but don't 'seed' questions, the community will catch that quickly).
  • You should establish yourself by providing useful answers that don't mention your product prior to doing anything else
  • You should clearly disclaim your affiliation with any product you mention in the course of making a recommendation to someone
  • If asked to stop, stop. You'll just have to live with the fact that you can't do what you want to do.
  • Our advertising rates are quite reasonable. Did I mention that you should reach out to us?
  • Continuing to try to link to your stuff after being asked to stop can and will result in your developers not being able to use the site at all. Don't do it.
  • Never, ever create accounts for the sole purpose of elevating the posts left by other accounts. That's a great way to end up in our blacklist, so that no one can link to your site.

In fact, you're welcome to link to this answer should you receive anything like that in the future, after letting the other party know the account you've worked very hard at making shiny just isn't worth whatever they might be offering.

There's no problem with anyone providing an honest-to-goodness testimonial for something that they've used, and feel confident recommending to someone else, provided that they're actually answering a question by doing so and doing it in good faith.

On Stack Overflow, questions that would invite this sort of thing are rarely asked in a manner that fits within our on-topic guidelines. This is part of the reason why we don't really entertain any kind of recommendation questions on a site that size - it's just too difficult to police.

We do thoroughly investigate abnormal numbers of links to something appearing in an odd period of time (quite easy to turn up, and Stack Overflow never sleeps). You could have 5k, 10k, 20k or even 350k - if we catch someone obviously astroturfing (for fun or profit) - mods won't hesitate to initiate a lengthy timed suspension or worse. It's very common for us to run queries on our live database while supporting moderators that are chasing down something that just doesn't smell right.

If someone approaches you with an offer to plant links on our site, please contact us and let us know. We'd much rather reach out to an organization before it comes to this and help them understand our self-promotion guidelines.

The key things any company needs to pay attention to:

  • Only a small percentage of your posts should promote your product (note, merely supporting folks by answering programming questions about your product is not considered promotion, but don't 'seed' questions, the community will catch that quickly).
  • You should establish yourself by providing useful answers that don't mention your product prior to doing anything else
  • You should clearly disclaim your affiliation with any product you mention in the course of making a recommendation to someone
  • If asked to stop, stop. You'll just have to live with the fact that you can't do what you want to do.
  • Our advertising rates are quite reasonable. Did I mention that you should reach out to us?
  • Continuing to try to link to your stuff after being asked to stop can and will result in your developers not being able to use the site at all. Don't do it.
  • Never, ever create accounts for the sole purpose of elevating the posts left by other accounts. That's a great way to end up in our blacklist, so that no one can link to your site.

In fact, you're welcome to link to this answer should you receive anything like that in the future, after letting the other party know the account you've worked very hard at making shiny just isn't worth whatever they might be offering.

added 69 characters in body
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user50049
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