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In my opinion, the issue here is that the text is in a comment and not in an answer. As such, rewording and rehashing won't make any difference to the spam factor, which is (the way I see it) the real problem.

So my proposed solution - one that I have been implementing myself in a very slow and stop-start manner - is to answer questions where the asker has posted code that uses the mysql extension, answer them well, and include the comment's text prominently in the answer body. Couple of examples of what I mean:

I believe that this approach, in the long run, will have the best effect. You appear friendly to the asker because you are giving them a good answer, and because you gave them a good answer the answer is likely to collect upvotes, and as an added effect they are more likely to pay attention to what you say.

If you don't feel the question should be allowed to live for very long (questions that are duplicates, too localized, or off topic) you can always make your answer community wiki.

Now, I do accept that this is likely to require considerably more effort than the hit-and-run comment - but isn't that sort of the reason this debate started in the first place? Who knows, you might even help someone along the way (perish the thought).

In my opinion, the issue here is that the text is in a comment and not in an answer. As such, rewording and rehashing won't make any difference to the spam factor, which is (the way I see it) the real problem.

So my proposed solution - one that I have been implementing myself in a very slow and stop-start manner - is to answer questions where the asker has posted code that uses the mysql extension, answer them well, and include the comment's text prominently in the answer body. Couple of examples of what I mean:

I believe that this approach, in the long run, will have the best effect. You appear friendly to the asker because you are giving them a good answer, and because you gave them a good answer the answer is likely to collect upvotes, and as an added effect they are more likely to pay attention to what you say.

If you don't feel the question should be allowed to live for very long (questions that are duplicates, too localized, or off topic) you can always make your answer community wiki.

Now, I do accept that this is likely to require considerably more effort than the hit-and-run comment - but isn't that sort of the reason this debate started in the first place? Who knows, you might even help someone along the way (perish the thought).

In my opinion, the issue here is that the text is in a comment and not in an answer. As such, rewording and rehashing won't make any difference to the spam factor, which is (the way I see it) the real problem.

So my proposed solution - one that I have been implementing myself in a very slow and stop-start manner - is to answer questions where the asker has posted code that uses the mysql extension, answer them well, and include the comment's text prominently in the answer body. Couple of examples of what I mean:

I believe that this approach, in the long run, will have the best effect. You appear friendly to the asker because you are giving them a good answer, and because you gave them a good answer the answer is likely to collect upvotes, and as an added effect they are more likely to pay attention to what you say.

If you don't feel the question should be allowed to live for very long (questions that are duplicates, too localized, or off topic) you can always make your answer community wiki.

Now, I do accept that this is likely to require considerably more effort than the hit-and-run comment - but isn't that sort of the reason this debate started in the first place? Who knows, you might even help someone along the way (perish the thought).

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DaveRandom
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In my opinion, the issue here is that the text is in a comment and not in an answer. As such, rewording and rehashing won't make any difference to the spam factor, which is (the way I see it) the real problem.

So my proposed solution - one that I have been implementing myself in a very slow and stop-start manner - is to answer questions where the asker has posted code that uses the mysql extension, answer them well, and include the comment's text prominently in the answer body. Couple of examples of what I mean:

I believe that this approach, in the long run, will have the best effect. You appear friendly to the asker because you are giving them a good answer, and because you gave them a good answer the answer is likely to collect upvotes, and as an added effect they are more likely to pay attention to what you say.

If you don't feel the question should be allowed to live for very long (questions that are duplicates, too localized, or off topic) you can always make your answer community wiki.

Now, I do accept that this is likely to require considerably more effort than the hit-and-run comment - but isn't that sort of the reason this debate started in the first place? Who knows, you might even help someone along the way (perish the thought).