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replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
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There is already an official policy on this, addressed to the company in question, in the Help Center: http://stackoverflow.com/help/product-supporthttps://stackoverflow.com/help/product-support

It explicitly covers your three examples of questions that shouldn't be asked here, and where the third-party should direct users instead:

  • I have an idea/request -- file an issue (on your own site)
  • Why do you? -- your own community (developer forum etc)
  • When will you? -- your own community

There's only really a need for staff to get involved if the company involved refuses to change their wording. The first thing to do would be for someone (i.e. you!) to send them a link to that policy, and ask them politely to tweak the wording. Remember to assume good faith - they probably just didn't spend long enough drafting the text, and didn't mean any harm.

See also my previous answer on the subject.

There is already an official policy on this, addressed to the company in question, in the Help Center: http://stackoverflow.com/help/product-support

It explicitly covers your three examples of questions that shouldn't be asked here, and where the third-party should direct users instead:

  • I have an idea/request -- file an issue (on your own site)
  • Why do you? -- your own community (developer forum etc)
  • When will you? -- your own community

There's only really a need for staff to get involved if the company involved refuses to change their wording. The first thing to do would be for someone (i.e. you!) to send them a link to that policy, and ask them politely to tweak the wording. Remember to assume good faith - they probably just didn't spend long enough drafting the text, and didn't mean any harm.

See also my previous answer on the subject.

There is already an official policy on this, addressed to the company in question, in the Help Center: https://stackoverflow.com/help/product-support

It explicitly covers your three examples of questions that shouldn't be asked here, and where the third-party should direct users instead:

  • I have an idea/request -- file an issue (on your own site)
  • Why do you? -- your own community (developer forum etc)
  • When will you? -- your own community

There's only really a need for staff to get involved if the company involved refuses to change their wording. The first thing to do would be for someone (i.e. you!) to send them a link to that policy, and ask them politely to tweak the wording. Remember to assume good faith - they probably just didn't spend long enough drafting the text, and didn't mean any harm.

See also my previous answer on the subject.

replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
Source Link

There is already an official policy on this, addressed to the company in question, in the Help Center: http://stackoverflow.com/help/product-support

It explicitly covers your three examples of questions that shouldn't be asked here, and where the third-party should direct users instead:

  • I have an idea/request -- file an issue (on your own site)
  • Why do you? -- your own community (developer forum etc)
  • When will you? -- your own community

There's only really a need for staff to get involved if the company involved refuses to change their wording. The first thing to do would be for someone (i.e. you!) to send them a link to that policy, and ask them politely to tweak the wording. Remember to assume good faith - they probably just didn't spend long enough drafting the text, and didn't mean any harm.

See also my previous answer on the subjectmy previous answer on the subject.

There is already an official policy on this, addressed to the company in question, in the Help Center: http://stackoverflow.com/help/product-support

It explicitly covers your three examples of questions that shouldn't be asked here, and where the third-party should direct users instead:

  • I have an idea/request -- file an issue (on your own site)
  • Why do you? -- your own community (developer forum etc)
  • When will you? -- your own community

There's only really a need for staff to get involved if the company involved refuses to change their wording. The first thing to do would be for someone (i.e. you!) to send them a link to that policy, and ask them politely to tweak the wording. Remember to assume good faith - they probably just didn't spend long enough drafting the text, and didn't mean any harm.

See also my previous answer on the subject.

There is already an official policy on this, addressed to the company in question, in the Help Center: http://stackoverflow.com/help/product-support

It explicitly covers your three examples of questions that shouldn't be asked here, and where the third-party should direct users instead:

  • I have an idea/request -- file an issue (on your own site)
  • Why do you? -- your own community (developer forum etc)
  • When will you? -- your own community

There's only really a need for staff to get involved if the company involved refuses to change their wording. The first thing to do would be for someone (i.e. you!) to send them a link to that policy, and ask them politely to tweak the wording. Remember to assume good faith - they probably just didn't spend long enough drafting the text, and didn't mean any harm.

See also my previous answer on the subject.

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There is already an official policy on this, addressed to the company in question, in the Help Center: http://stackoverflow.com/help/product-support

It explicitly covers your three examples of questions that shouldn't be asked here, and where the third-party should direct users instead:

  • I have an idea/request -- file an issue (on your own site)
  • Why do you? -- your own community (developer forum etc)
  • When will you? -- your own community

There's only really a need for staff to get involved if the company involved refuses to change their wording. The first thing to do would be for someone (i.e. you!) to send them a link to that policy, and ask them politely to tweak the wording. Remember to assume good faith - they probably just didn't spend long enough drafting the text, and didn't mean any harm.

See also my previous answer on the subject.