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Timeline for Help us test question triage!

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Jun 3, 2020 at 15:29 history edited CommunityBot
Commonmark migration
Dec 4, 2014 at 23:49 comment added Shog9 Anyone can get unblocked if they demonstrate a willingness to stop doing whatever got them blocked in the first place, @Deduplicator. Also, there are different forms of "blocks" that affect different users and have different lengths.
Dec 4, 2014 at 23:20 comment added Deduplicator @Shog9: Doesn't that mean that net will plummet even further? (And I really hope that university could restore its reputation somewhat... Anyway, only users below a rep-threshold are blocked when coming from a blocked ip, right?)
Dec 4, 2014 at 19:17 comment added Shog9 Some networks are worse than others, for various reasons. We had to ban an entire university at one point... Geographical areas are hit and miss. There are places that are particularly bad for things like spam and plagiarism, but again there tends to be a pretty high false-positive rate (also, geolocation is inexact at best). We are using known-to-be-problematic subnets to augment the content analysis right now though... Stay away from Comcast in Los Angeles.
Dec 4, 2014 at 18:54 comment added Denis de Bernardy "it's some of the worst authors who are the most motivated to get their questions posted by any means necessary" - I'm not entirely surprised, seeing how unsophisticated end-users with vague problems tend to be the most time consuming and insistent users support desks need to deal with. As an aside, and I hate to be the one asking this since it could be politically incorrect, but do we have any kind of metrics on whether these authors are concentrated in a specific geographical area or IP address ranges?
Dec 4, 2014 at 18:46 comment added Denis de Bernardy @Shog9: I foresee a slight risk, when monitoring whether a user clicks suggested related questions, that the suggested questions' titles reveal all that is needed (to a knowledgeable user) to dismiss them as irrelevant. But then, this knowledgeable user, I'd expect, will generally output a high enough quality that it doesn't land in a triage queue. If you've the tools handy, studying in-page metrics such as the presence of a long pause might also give a good indicator that a user is doing his research and at least considering the possibility that he's entering a dup.
Dec 4, 2014 at 18:28 comment added Shog9 Better ask form is an extremely good idea. Quality meter is likely to be counter-productive: we're basing the score on various factors that correlate with low-quality questions, but eliminating those from a post do not necessarily make it good. However, we already provide some general guidance on writing a good question when a post scores exceptionally low, and could probably do more there.
Dec 4, 2014 at 18:25 comment added Shog9 Regarding duplicates: we already try to identify these and present them to askers. A huge number of questions don't get asked because of this... Looking into identifying folks who don't bother checking for dups as an additional signal.
Dec 4, 2014 at 18:23 comment added Shog9 Regarding blocking "Very low score questions" - we've been doing this for years. It's not enough. It's not just good authors that expand and squeak by... Ironically, it's some of the worst authors who are the most motivated to get their questions posted by any means necessary (even if they never respond to feedback after that).
Dec 4, 2014 at 17:55 comment added gnat "Add a quality meter" -- FWIW there is already a dedicated feature request for this: Add a “Magic 8-Ball” feature to the Ask a Question page
Dec 4, 2014 at 17:34 comment added Denis de Bernardy @gunr2171: Imho, a quality meter would serve its purpose even if a user could potentially game it. I'd imagine it's less of a hassle to try to improve a question than it is to try to reverse-engineer and work around a meter.
Dec 4, 2014 at 17:25 history edited Denis de Bernardy CC BY-SA 3.0
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Dec 4, 2014 at 17:21 comment added gunr2171 I disagree with the real-time quality meter (too easy to game the system for people who want to bypass it) and the duplicates suggestions. All other points I agree with.
Dec 4, 2014 at 17:13 history answered Denis de Bernardy CC BY-SA 3.0