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I'd like to propose the following rules (or hints):

When a link points to a deprecated/removed page (here, the sourceforge project page), replace it with a link to the new page and add a note about the edit at the end of the post. The note only needs to mention the prior URI but shouldn't be a link since the goal is to deprecate it.

If there is no replacement (for instance the link was a direct link to a .exe from 2009), keep it but strike it and add a note at the end of post explaining where to look now.

Since links are all grouped at the end of messages, it didn't seem very practical to add the explanation right after the link that has been changed. I hope this approach will ensure the links are immediately useful to readers without changing the meaning of answers in ways that voters didn't expect.

I've just done an edit which can be seen at http://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/8542770https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/8542770 (I'm not sure the link will remain valid once the edit has been accepted or rejected). Please tell whether you agree with the way it has been done.

tl:dr; yes, do such edits, but leave a clear explanation and do it on a case-by-case basis; remaining true to the original meaning is most important; this is not about rewriting history but helping users (this is probably obvious but a reminder never hurts)

I'd like to propose the following rules (or hints):

When a link points to a deprecated/removed page (here, the sourceforge project page), replace it with a link to the new page and add a note about the edit at the end of the post. The note only needs to mention the prior URI but shouldn't be a link since the goal is to deprecate it.

If there is no replacement (for instance the link was a direct link to a .exe from 2009), keep it but strike it and add a note at the end of post explaining where to look now.

Since links are all grouped at the end of messages, it didn't seem very practical to add the explanation right after the link that has been changed. I hope this approach will ensure the links are immediately useful to readers without changing the meaning of answers in ways that voters didn't expect.

I've just done an edit which can be seen at http://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/8542770 (I'm not sure the link will remain valid once the edit has been accepted or rejected). Please tell whether you agree with the way it has been done.

tl:dr; yes, do such edits, but leave a clear explanation and do it on a case-by-case basis; remaining true to the original meaning is most important; this is not about rewriting history but helping users (this is probably obvious but a reminder never hurts)

I'd like to propose the following rules (or hints):

When a link points to a deprecated/removed page (here, the sourceforge project page), replace it with a link to the new page and add a note about the edit at the end of the post. The note only needs to mention the prior URI but shouldn't be a link since the goal is to deprecate it.

If there is no replacement (for instance the link was a direct link to a .exe from 2009), keep it but strike it and add a note at the end of post explaining where to look now.

Since links are all grouped at the end of messages, it didn't seem very practical to add the explanation right after the link that has been changed. I hope this approach will ensure the links are immediately useful to readers without changing the meaning of answers in ways that voters didn't expect.

I've just done an edit which can be seen at https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/8542770 (I'm not sure the link will remain valid once the edit has been accepted or rejected). Please tell whether you agree with the way it has been done.

tl:dr; yes, do such edits, but leave a clear explanation and do it on a case-by-case basis; remaining true to the original meaning is most important; this is not about rewriting history but helping users (this is probably obvious but a reminder never hurts)

Source Link

I'd like to propose the following rules (or hints):

When a link points to a deprecated/removed page (here, the sourceforge project page), replace it with a link to the new page and add a note about the edit at the end of the post. The note only needs to mention the prior URI but shouldn't be a link since the goal is to deprecate it.

If there is no replacement (for instance the link was a direct link to a .exe from 2009), keep it but strike it and add a note at the end of post explaining where to look now.

Since links are all grouped at the end of messages, it didn't seem very practical to add the explanation right after the link that has been changed. I hope this approach will ensure the links are immediately useful to readers without changing the meaning of answers in ways that voters didn't expect.

I've just done an edit which can be seen at http://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/8542770 (I'm not sure the link will remain valid once the edit has been accepted or rejected). Please tell whether you agree with the way it has been done.

tl:dr; yes, do such edits, but leave a clear explanation and do it on a case-by-case basis; remaining true to the original meaning is most important; this is not about rewriting history but helping users (this is probably obvious but a reminder never hurts)