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Jul 10, 2023 at 18:31 comment added Jiahao Zhao The fact that a badly asked question is considered "rude" speaks volumes to this context.
Jan 31, 2023 at 16:00 comment added mtraceur @MartinJames I respect your reply a lot. Thank you for taking the possibility seriously. If everyone did that every once in a while, things would be a lot better. Cheers.
Jan 31, 2023 at 11:07 comment added E_net4 @mtraceur Your thread of comments comes across as you disagreeing with how curation is generally done on the platform, combined with putting curation and rudeness all in the same bag, and making vague accusations of curators deliberately doing things wrong while throwing the onus back at them to show evidence of that. This is hardly constructive, especially for someone who seems to be advocating against "overshooting and making judgments too quickly". This question might help you digest your aversion to this answer.
Jan 31, 2023 at 10:50 comment added Martin James I will try an experiment. I will quickly scan the top 50 on the C tag and mark on paper, with crosses and ticks, which are bad Then I'll go back, open and fully read them all. Then I can determine my crapposcope skills.
Jan 31, 2023 at 10:41 comment added Martin James You may be right though, in my defense, I always open the question and read it, even if I am 99.9% sure, (from the title and extract), that it's going to be yet another (madcademic i++ i ++i printf i++,i,i--), (args copied into params), (scanf LF loop), (unassigned pointer UB), (undebugged segfault) etc etc FAQ.
Jan 31, 2023 at 0:08 comment added mtraceur And since you probably need it explicitly said: I agree with you that the problem you're describing exists and is pretty bad. I hate the deluge of low quality questions as much as you do, and you're a hero for fighting back against them. What I oppose is the unwillingness to acknowledge that at the same time, you or others with your mindset are maybe sometimes overshooting and making judgments too quickly and too dismissively without taking the time to actually understand what a question is saying enough to be able to judge correctly if it's an instance of the problem you're fighting.
Jan 31, 2023 at 0:05 comment added mtraceur Ib4 more self-uncritical "no numbers, no problem": ditto, look in the mirror, etc. The numbers exist, you're just willfully avoiding counting anything that contradicts your one-sided view while counting the anecdotes in your experience that match the one problem your feelings are sensitive to as if that's somehow any more hard or rigorous of data than what the people pointing out the other problems have.
Jan 30, 2023 at 23:53 comment added mtraceur One big example of premature/wrong/sloppy judgment rudeness: clumsily imprecise and inaccurate yet really fast closed-as-duplicate is such a common StackOverflow problem that for years we've seen questions written with proactive guards telling those of you who don't pay attention "no this is different than [other question], because [restatement of things you would already know if you actually turned on your brain when judging the question as low-quality]."
Jan 30, 2023 at 23:51 comment added mtraceur The problem is that you are not good enough to be as quick and confident with your judgements of rudeness and badness as you think you are, so your false negative rate on downvotes, close votes, flags, duplicate reports, and so forth is too high. And even if by some chance you individually are not overshooting the mark, too many of the people on your side of this issue are.
Oct 8, 2021 at 5:39 comment added j_random_hacker I looked at the first 5 links you posted; only the first 1 was actually rude. -1.
Mar 2, 2021 at 14:30 comment added Martin James I mean..... it happened in the answer below: 'I just came across a recent question which received multiple rude comments from a high-rep user who criticized the OP such that he decided to remove the question'. A story with no link, no evidence. Why did the answerer not favourite/follow or otherwise save a link the question so that mods, and users with 10k+, could read the alleged injustice...........?
Mar 2, 2021 at 12:12 comment added Martin James In an online world of fake news, false allegations and downright malicious liars, some means of sorting the pearls from the crap. Listening to stories won't cut it. No real evidence, no numbers, no problem:)
Mar 2, 2021 at 12:06 comment added Martin James @Leonard I do get it, and I do not deny that there is a social problem - people believing stuff without evidence, going with a narrative that appeals to them: "my questions were not abusive, not rude, not bad in any way, so any critical comments must be because of the 'toxic, hostile' environment that so many, (a tiny fraction of a very large number of users), blog about".
Mar 1, 2021 at 3:25 comment added Leonard @MartinJames You still don't get it. First, this is NOT an engineering problem. This is a social problem. You can't treat every problem like a soft. dev project. Second, I repeat, Google "stackoverflow rude" and you will see hundres of screenshots, screen recordings, anecdotes. Those should be enough of quantified evidences. Let me be very clear: It is inherently rare for rude comments or answers to stay public online. Therefore, it naturally becomes impossible to link to most, if not all, of them. Thus, expecting and accepting only links as evidences is unreasonable.
Feb 28, 2021 at 10:33 comment added Martin James @Leonard it's realistic for scientists, engineers, medical doctors etc. Giving weight to anecdotes, without evidence, leads to failed projects, dead patients and experimental errors. That also applies to software development, where stories and assumptions lead to debug fails and missed milestones. Bloggers etc. make stuff up all the time - do you not get that? Evidence, or it didn't happen.
Feb 28, 2021 at 8:54 comment added Leonard @MartinJames That is not realistic. Such attitude is very limiting when it comes to solving real world problems. There is a reason why we do qualitative researches - real world problems are solved with not enough quantified data or quantified evidences. Yes, anecdotes are therefore considered as evidences. It's called a "customer experience". Our priority is to solve this problem users face. Whether you accept them or not is irrelevant. Being that said, such attitude is neither "scientific" nor "medical' since actual science combines both induction and deduction.
Feb 27, 2021 at 13:44 comment added Martin James @Leonard it's a scientific attitude, it's a medical attitude, it's my attitude. I will not accept anecdotes from sundry bloggers as evidence. The mumblings from the entitled echo-chambers of 'WeHateSO.com', (AKA 'IlostStreetCredBecauseIFailedToConTheNerdDrones.com'), are not my problem.
Feb 27, 2021 at 6:57 comment added Leonard @MartinJames Nope. Your assumption that denies the problems faced by the users is very problematic. There are forums, YouTube videos, screenshots to the rude comments etc. on SO. Yet you are simply calling them "baseless" because there are not many links? That's a nonsense. First, for obvious reasons they are also proofs. Second, many rude comments would get flagged and deleted, hence it is naturally very difficult to link them. Not considering that and simply asking "bring links or it didn't happen" is a very short-sighted attitude.
Jan 17, 2021 at 17:33 comment added Martin James ...and that blog is a bad joke now. It was laughable when it first appeared.
Jan 17, 2021 at 17:31 comment added Martin James @Leonard SO would admit to employing aliens from Uranus if that resulted in more bums on sites. No numbers, no evidence, no problem. Just because some unknown number of users claim something does not make the something actionable. The regular SO curators are vastly outnumbered by the deadbeats who demand that naive SO slave drones do all their home/paid work for free - that does not make them right.
Jan 17, 2021 at 17:14 comment added Leonard @MartinJames SO itself admitted the problem as well. So it is obviously not a "baseless libel". Saying that is simply a lie. stackoverflow.blog/2018/04/26/…
Jan 17, 2021 at 17:08 comment added Leonard @MartinJames First, rude comments get deleted eventually but damage has been done so it is difficult to provide concrete links. So the argument like "bring the evidence or we will ignore!" is such an irresponsible comment. Second, google "stackoverflow rude" and you see so many screenshots of rude comments. i said this multiple times but have you actually tried?
Jan 10, 2021 at 17:46 comment added Peter Mortensen Most of the examples have been deleted by now (only visible with more than 10,000 reputation points - for most practical purposes the evidence is non-existent). Perhaps make a note to that effect? And/or some other action?
Jan 10, 2021 at 17:39 history edited Peter Mortensen CC BY-SA 4.0
Active reading [<https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/apparent#Adjective>].
Jan 8, 2021 at 16:26 comment added Martin James @Leonard I don't care if there are thousands of screaming ranters, (and there probably are). Decades of deadbeats, issuing tens of thousands of homework dumps, all being refused a bent-knee, make a big noise. Still does not mean they are right, which is is why I reject all those mega-anecdotes and insist on evidence, numbers etc. Without such real data, there are only fairy-stories and baseless libel:(
Jan 8, 2021 at 4:24 comment added Leonard @MartinJames Have you even Googled? The fact that you deem OP's point s "fake" just because it doesn't have link is nonsense Yes in an ideal world or at court we would need the evidence. But there are so many voices out there complaining for rude comments at SO. Just google "stackoverflow rude" yourself and find youtube videos, reddit, images. There are tons of examples. The reason why I find it hard to deliver my example is because I would flag them and they would disappear.
Dec 26, 2020 at 18:02 comment added IGP Most of those links go to deleted questions which might be a good thing considering the comments. Still, I'm left curious about them. I wish you'd have used an archiving service.
Dec 21, 2020 at 2:38 comment added Nate T CONTD. Even if tomorrow saw a massive site overhaul, and new users from then forward ALL decided to stay, there wouldn't be enough mid-level users (noobs of yesterday aka me) to close the gap, and carry the site through the transition. This may sound glum, but I believe the bed is already made for stack overflow.
Dec 21, 2020 at 2:33 comment added Nate T In 2020 it doesn't really matter anyway. The sites goal of eventually being the be-all-end-all for development related answers is shot. The rate of change of development techniques / tools is way too high, and our rate of renewal among userbase (new users who have stuck around to replace older users who have moved on) is way too low.
Dec 21, 2020 at 1:35 comment added Nate T @MartinJames I've noticed this a couple of times on Bountied Questions albeit to answers. One minute, there are say 5 answers, and the next time the page is refreshed, sometimes seconds later, Multiple answers will have scores decreased by 1 and a new answer will have been submitted. The first time I saw this, it was by accident, but now I will occasionally watch a random bountied Q just to see what is going down from one refresh to the next. You have to have a fair amount of rep to downvote, so these are people who know what they are doing.
Jul 21, 2020 at 12:08 comment added Martin James @user51462 well, yes. The net, and SO in particular, is infested by immature thugs whose only response to any kind of criticism is to lash out:(
Jul 21, 2020 at 11:26 comment added user51462 @MartinJames, what if an answerer attempts to answer your question and when you point out that their answer isn't applicable to your use case, they delete it and downvote your question instead? This happened to me today and there's no way for me to appeal that. My post was made after consulting the plugin source code, documentation and Google for similar questions. It included a minimal reprex, as well as my own attempt at solving the problem. So I'm at a loss as to why it attracted the downvotes and feel intimidated to post in the future as a result.
Jul 2, 2020 at 12:39 comment added Martin James @Leonard two reasons. First, I cannot have an answer to allegedly-rude comments that have been deleted. Second, the op uses the term 'bullies' over few fake internet points and some comments on a Q&A site. Since I have some experience with bullying in my family, I know that the OP is totally clueless about the effects of cyber/physical bullying and doesn't care how many people he might upset by such a lack of consideration. I try not to engage with such users as it would likely get me suspended.
Jul 2, 2020 at 8:47 comment added Leonard @MartinJames How about you actually answer the question provided by the OP then? The question in the OP was not bad and not “rude” either. But the comments and the unjustified downvotes were rude. What is your say on that?
Jul 1, 2020 at 20:40 comment added Martin James I have made constructive suggestions in the past. One, for example, is to display the language FAQ wiki to new-account question posters who submit a question with a language tag, together with 'Are you sure that your question is not covered by these FAQ?'. If covered, many will post anyway, but they cannot then moan about getting heavily downvoted.
Jul 1, 2020 at 20:26 comment added Martin James ..and OP's will not be getting dismissive answers from me - I rarely answer now anyway. If I see an answer, or can hint at one, to a sub-prime question, I just comment it, (I don't want or need rep from cucumber answers). If anyone thinks I am rude, exclusive and/or exclusionary for that approach, that's not my problem.
Jul 1, 2020 at 20:14 comment added Martin James @Loofer what duty? Why should skilled and experienced developers waste their volunteered time on unresearched, no-effort questions in the, usually vain, hope that, amongst the hordes of homework vamps, the odd one or two might want more than to hand in someone else's work on monday morning? I, for one, will stick with plan 'A': answering good questions and downvoting the bad.
Jul 1, 2020 at 16:10 comment added Loofer I mean the trivial answer to your 'problem' (well the one expounded on in your answer) is that we the old guard have a duty to welcome those new to the platform, and so to frame bad questions as 'rude' absolves us from the care required to turn these users into valued community members. However dismissive answers from the old guard are rude and add to the exclusive and exclusionary atmosphere. Also the type of 'clever' in your answer is off-putting to many.
Jul 1, 2020 at 3:05 comment added Martin James @Loofer yes, thanks. Now we need solutions for it.
Jun 30, 2020 at 23:59 comment added Loofer This answer is indicative of the terrible state of this website.
Jun 30, 2020 at 7:33 comment added E_net4 @DevilsAdvocate That is a valid perspective, and one that you should embrace: make your questions the best they can be, so that they may live on to be useful to more people than just the asker. One of the major conclusions from this Meta question is that, in a site of this scale with such a huge stream of questions arriving every day, askers should not be expecting the customer treatment.
Jun 30, 2020 at 5:13 history edited Cody GrayMod CC BY-SA 4.0
That comparison to slavery was over the line. I've tried to modify this with something that gets a similar point across and maintains your "voice", without being offensive. If you don't like this, the next option is removing the entire last paragraph.
Jun 29, 2020 at 20:59 comment added Martin James There are far more rude and abusive questions posted than comments. I created a list of them with no great search effort. If you consider that attempts to outsource the grunt work of Googling, checking and searching to SO contributers is not rude and abusive, that's not my problem.
Jun 29, 2020 at 20:29 comment added Martin James @Devil'sAdvocate I don't care if questions are badly formatted, (except for code sections). I don't mind if the grammar/syntax is imperfect, (except for code sections). I do care about poorly-researched questions that expect SO contributors to do their due diligence searching for them.
Jun 29, 2020 at 19:14 comment added user736893 The fact that you (Martin James) refer to these poorly formatted questions as "rude and insulting" is very telling. Welcome to Stack Exchange, where askers are second class citizens.
Jun 18, 2020 at 8:26 comment added Martin James @Leonard of course I read the whole post, but if the title is sufficiently vague as to leave a framing challenge opening, it's not my problem.
Jun 1, 2020 at 7:33 comment added E_net4 @Leonard This is not the place for extended discussion. For what it's worth, this answer covers a very concerning portion of this site's warts and is hardly getting any better. If you disagree, post your own answer or ask a new question.
Jun 1, 2020 at 7:16 comment added Leonard @MartinJames You are assuming that the resource is only limited to solve one side of the problem. That is problematic. Yeah I understand there can be more rude questions since there are more novices than experts. Howerver, that doesn't mean we should ignore the rudeness of the other side. We must think of ways to solve both.
Jun 1, 2020 at 7:14 comment added Leonard @MartinJames So you answered without reading the entire post. You asked "How is that missing the point?", now you answered it yourself. As for downvotes, it is not an abuse but at the same time it is problematic in that it is sometimes not justified, the same goes with marking wrong duplicates which I see so often. And yes in that case it is VERY rude because you falsely took away someone's opportunity to get answers. SO needs to be modified to address those issues.å
Jun 1, 2020 at 7:05 comment added Martin James @Leonard the title describes only 'rudeness' without further qualification. Rude downvotes? It's an integer number, not abuse. Rude comments? Well, since I can generate a pagefull of links to rude questions in the time taken to find half-a-dozen rude comments, where is the available effort best spent?
Jun 1, 2020 at 6:51 comment added Leonard @MartinJames You are talking about rude questions, while the OP is talking about the rude comments and users on the answering side. Your statement "do you expect that I would comit suicide for offenders" is just extreme and the rest does not make sense. Seems like you are so stuck in the frame of "rude askers" that you are failing to see the rude comments and downvotes. We need to acknowledge both, not just one side.
May 12, 2020 at 23:31 comment added Martin James @Leonard 'The rudeness on Stack Overflow is too damn high' - I agreed, and gave many examples of rudeness. How is that missing the point? As for comments, do you expect that I would comit suicide for offenders? Add comments that are likely to end up out-of-context, quote-mined garbage on Totter/Facepalm as examples of 'hostility/toxicity'? No, not gonna happen.
May 12, 2020 at 17:55 comment added Leonard This answer is problematic for two reasons. First, you are totally missing the point of the OP. Second, if no comments are provided, the offenders are more likely to never get better and keep producing bad questions that you are very afraid of. This only perpetuates the situation.
Nov 24, 2019 at 10:14 comment added Martin James @Quidam Why is you experience on 'French' relevant on SO meta? I asked for examples of 'good, valid questions that are downvoted/put on hold/closed' on Stack Overflow. It was a trivial exercise to find a long list of bad questions that required curation, so why is is so difficult for you to provide a short list of questions that were treated unfairly? Is it that they, substantially, do not exist?
Nov 24, 2019 at 9:28 comment added Martin James @Quidam you may consider 'moderator', (by which I guess you mean 'user curator') behaviour irrational, downvoting/closing 'Computers 101' mega-dupes etc, but fail to suggest a rational alternative. Slavishly copying the same text, day-after-day, to yet more users who think that that the time taken to read/search books/sites/SO is someone else's chore, is not rational either:(
Nov 24, 2019 at 4:53 comment added Quidam When I have the bad idea to let a comment about the closing being unfair explaining why, I get some "you could go on another site". It's an irrational behaviour, not constructive. This site is rotten, and nothing can be done to try to push it in a better direction. If I say that it's because I see how people get mad when people tries; They just want to go on downvoting subjectively without trying to improve things, and to help the users. The rude people are the one who never heard of the bad reputation of the site! or they do not care.
Nov 24, 2019 at 4:50 comment added Quidam "Prove it, provide good clear examples of good, valid questions that are downvoted/put on hold/closed... ." I see tons of them, with my mod tool, and it happens also for me, and the last example is what I said in the previous comment. Everything is revenge vote. For me, when it's not a revenge vote, there's the goodwill to help the user, and to remove the downvote if the question is improved (and we have to help for that).
Nov 24, 2019 at 4:49 comment added Quidam If a moderator whines about being not fairly treated by SE, I will say: you reap what you sow. It's a bit unfair, because there is very nice moderators, but it's not the culture here. The culture is to be rude, scornful, (and sometimes unfair.)
Nov 24, 2019 at 4:46 comment added Quidam on a question, about etymology, they told me that the word "color" didn't mean "color" in English, and "candidus" wasn't a type of white. I quoted Oxford, Lewis & Short, and 5 or 6 other dictionaries and researches papers, but they found one dictionary saying the opposite, and downvoted my question, and upvoted the answers saying that Gaffiot and Oxford was unreliable. Because the guy who made the answer is their friend, and I'm the one who try to attract attention on the welcoming behaviour we should have, so all my arguments were ignored, and everything downvoted. It's a mafia.
Nov 24, 2019 at 4:42 comment added Quidam It's more and more rude!!! Moderators are allowed to be rude, and there are no sanctions. That's the problem. It's a mafia. People know each other. For instance, on the French StackExchange, I had moderator tools, and I was trying other people to let comment on the questions before downvoting or closing the questions, because the community is not always welcoming, they told me that if I don't find the community welcoming, I could leave... I was just trying to avoid downvotes in suggesting edit and communication between the people with mod tools and users.
May 23, 2017 at 12:38 history edited CommunityBot
replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
Oct 28, 2015 at 19:55 comment added Hans Passant You are kinda missing the point. The rudeness the OP is asking about is the one where users keep asking the same question over and over again and expect a different answer every time.
Oct 28, 2015 at 19:53 history edited Martin James CC BY-SA 3.0
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Oct 28, 2015 at 19:48 comment added Patrice @ChongLipPhang that's the easy way out... "Well I could provide it, but it won't help". NO, JUST NO. You say there's an issue? Prove it, provide good clear examples of good, valid questions that are downvoted/put on hold/closed... .Martin, in 5 minutes of edit, found 18 terrible questions..... if the problem is as prominent as you say, you should be able to find examples of it. Looking at the amount of examples, I'm with Martin on this one (not because of rep, but because he backs up what he says with more than "EVERYONE KNOWS IT'S A PROBLEM" )
Oct 28, 2015 at 19:45 comment added Mage Xy Also, if the problem is truly so difficult that the asker can't figure it out after all that work, then the asker needs to at least take the time to make the question clear and understandable for people who are volunteering their time to help.
Oct 28, 2015 at 19:44 comment added Mage Xy I'm with @MartinJames on this one. Posting a question on StackOverflow should the last resort for people trying to solve a problem. Before that, they should have done plenty of research, debugged their code as best they can, and should be able to speak intelligently about their question. For complete newbies, this may be quite difficult - but then again, that's the biggest part of learning. Getting SO users to tell you the answer without having attempted solving the problem robs the asker of important learning skills.
Oct 28, 2015 at 19:35 history edited Martin James CC BY-SA 3.0
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Oct 28, 2015 at 19:33 history edited Martin James CC BY-SA 3.0
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Oct 28, 2015 at 18:49 comment added Patrice yeah, how DARE WE tell people their questions are bad and not up to the quality of the website that they decided to go to because it was a quality website.... (I love how you turned this question around though ^^)
Oct 28, 2015 at 18:47 history answered Martin James CC BY-SA 3.0