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Jul 24, 2015 at 17:15 comment added Alexei Levenkov Note that there is absolutely nothing wrong to have seriously downvoted post on meta as it allows people to support different opinions (META votes on answers are really "agree"/"disagree" rather than "your answer is badly written")
Jul 24, 2015 at 17:13 comment added Alexei Levenkov Neither agree nor disagree with the post, but I see why many people would disagree by downvoting - your post reads as you would mainly "reject" edit, while most people consider better action to be either "reject and improve" (if you feel that links should not be updated inline) or "improve".
Jul 24, 2015 at 17:04 comment added Nathan Tuggy I suspect the downvotes are because other reviewers have (like myself and @DanGetz) experienced almost no really bad link fix suggestions and a lot of perfectly legitimate ones.
Jul 24, 2015 at 8:44 comment added BatteryBackupUnit @Gimby yes i got that part already, but that's where i digress from your view: for me a defective link is not as good as a working link (unless maybe there really should not be a link at all). So for me your statement still translates to "I'd rather have worse content than having it become active". Now let's say the link truly is obsolete. Wouldn't it be better to remove the link altogether than leave a defect one? I would think so. And in this case i think one should do the right thing (decline + remove link) or just skip it altogether (no voting at all)..
Jul 24, 2015 at 7:38 comment added Gimby @BatteryBackupUnit take note of my reasoning: the question/answer should not become defective because of a broken link, the relevant information should already be present in the question/answer itself.
Jul 24, 2015 at 7:38 comment added Gimby @DanGetz perhaps not, I've only been starting recently so you probably have had more time to get a wider sample range. Too bad I get downvotes but no explanations why, I tried to be as precise as possible to hopefully learn what I might be doing right and wrong.
Jul 23, 2015 at 16:58 comment added Dan Getz Interesting. I've seen many suggested edits to fix broken links in the past, and almost every single one was correctly fixing the link to point to the same information it used to. I guess we haven't been seeing the same edits.
Jul 23, 2015 at 16:48 comment added BatteryBackupUnit so you rather want the answer "defective" with a broken link than having it become "recently active"? To me it sounds very strange (or rather even destructive) to even consider this criteria.
Jul 23, 2015 at 13:55 history answered Gimby CC BY-SA 3.0