Skip to main content
replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
Source Link

TaggerBot is not ready to be let loose full speed, but you should keep iterating on the code until it can achieve > 60% approval rate. You've picked one of the hardest problems in computer science today, success at this would be a contribution to the field of computer science and machine learning.

Concerns:

Consider this edit: http://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/10095827https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/10095827

The 1-reputation user asked a terrible question and pasted a mountain of wrongly formatted code that doesn't run, and says: "I don't know what to do" or some variation on that. The question should be deleted, closed, or have it's mountain of code trimmed down to 8 lines with a SSCCE.

Instead, Taggerbot examines the question, and sees an invocation of "listView", sure, listview is used in their code, but that's not the main theme of the question, it's a not-important side-show story.

So Taggerbot did damage by claiming that "the most important concept of this question is listView". It's not! Maybe the user wanted a shoulder to cry on or wanted to have the fact that he's missing a semicolon pointed out. The added tags do damage, in my mind, by adding noise in the form of wrongly asserted precision.

TaggerBot is a noble idea, and you should keep building it out and improving it, but keep it on a tight leash, and at current approval levels < 40%, you're hurting stackoverflow by consuming the good will of editors who greatly improve the site.

Conclusion:

Keep iterating on it, have it do at most 2 or 5 edit suggestions per day, and when you can demonstrate 80% or more approval rate, with positive reviews, then after another performance review, then the highest rep users give it the green light and increase throttle to full.

TaggerBot is not ready to be let loose full speed, but you should keep iterating on the code until it can achieve > 60% approval rate. You've picked one of the hardest problems in computer science today, success at this would be a contribution to the field of computer science and machine learning.

Concerns:

Consider this edit: http://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/10095827

The 1-reputation user asked a terrible question and pasted a mountain of wrongly formatted code that doesn't run, and says: "I don't know what to do" or some variation on that. The question should be deleted, closed, or have it's mountain of code trimmed down to 8 lines with a SSCCE.

Instead, Taggerbot examines the question, and sees an invocation of "listView", sure, listview is used in their code, but that's not the main theme of the question, it's a not-important side-show story.

So Taggerbot did damage by claiming that "the most important concept of this question is listView". It's not! Maybe the user wanted a shoulder to cry on or wanted to have the fact that he's missing a semicolon pointed out. The added tags do damage, in my mind, by adding noise in the form of wrongly asserted precision.

TaggerBot is a noble idea, and you should keep building it out and improving it, but keep it on a tight leash, and at current approval levels < 40%, you're hurting stackoverflow by consuming the good will of editors who greatly improve the site.

Conclusion:

Keep iterating on it, have it do at most 2 or 5 edit suggestions per day, and when you can demonstrate 80% or more approval rate, with positive reviews, then after another performance review, then the highest rep users give it the green light and increase throttle to full.

TaggerBot is not ready to be let loose full speed, but you should keep iterating on the code until it can achieve > 60% approval rate. You've picked one of the hardest problems in computer science today, success at this would be a contribution to the field of computer science and machine learning.

Concerns:

Consider this edit: https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/10095827

The 1-reputation user asked a terrible question and pasted a mountain of wrongly formatted code that doesn't run, and says: "I don't know what to do" or some variation on that. The question should be deleted, closed, or have it's mountain of code trimmed down to 8 lines with a SSCCE.

Instead, Taggerbot examines the question, and sees an invocation of "listView", sure, listview is used in their code, but that's not the main theme of the question, it's a not-important side-show story.

So Taggerbot did damage by claiming that "the most important concept of this question is listView". It's not! Maybe the user wanted a shoulder to cry on or wanted to have the fact that he's missing a semicolon pointed out. The added tags do damage, in my mind, by adding noise in the form of wrongly asserted precision.

TaggerBot is a noble idea, and you should keep building it out and improving it, but keep it on a tight leash, and at current approval levels < 40%, you're hurting stackoverflow by consuming the good will of editors who greatly improve the site.

Conclusion:

Keep iterating on it, have it do at most 2 or 5 edit suggestions per day, and when you can demonstrate 80% or more approval rate, with positive reviews, then after another performance review, then the highest rep users give it the green light and increase throttle to full.

added 165 characters in body
Source Link
Eric Leschinski
  • 153.3k
  • 1
  • 17
  • 16

TaggerBot is not ready to be let loose full speed, but you should keep iterating on the code until it can achieve > 60% approval rate. You've picked one of the hardest problems in computer science today, success at this would be a contribution to the field of computer science and machine learning.

Concerns:

Consider this edit: http://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/10095827

The 1-reputation user asked a terrible question and pasted a mountain of wrongly formatted code that doesn't run, and says: "I don't know what to do" or some variation on that. The question should be deleted, closed, or have it's mountain of code trimmed down to 8 lines with a SSCCE.

Instead, Taggerbot examines the question, and sees an invocation of "listView", sure, listview is used in their code, but that's not the main theme of the question, it's a not-important side-show story.

So Taggerbot did damage by claiming that "the most important concept of this question is listView". It's not! Maybe the user wanted a shoulder to cry on or wanted to have the fact that he's missing a semicolon pointed out. The added tags do damage, in my mind, by adding noise in the form of wrongly asserted precision.

TaggerBot is a noble idea, and you should keep building it out and improving it, but keep it on a tight leash, and at current approval levels < 40%, you're hurting stackoverflow by consuming the good will of editors who greatly improve the site.

Conclusion:

Keep iterating on it, have it do at most 2 or 5 edit suggestions per day, and when you can demonstrate 80% or more approval rate, with positive reviews, then after another performance review, wethen the highest rep users give it the green light and increase throttle to full.

TaggerBot is not ready to be let loose full speed, but you should keep iterating on the code until it can achieve 60% approval rate.

Concerns:

Consider this edit: http://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/10095827

The 1-reputation user asked a terrible question and pasted a mountain of wrongly formatted code that doesn't run, and says: "I don't know what to do" or some variation on that. The question should be deleted, closed, or have it's mountain of code trimmed down to 8 lines with a SSCCE.

Instead, Taggerbot examines the question, and sees an invocation of "listView", sure, listview is used in their code, but that's not the main theme of the question, it's a not-important side-show story.

So Taggerbot did damage by claiming that "the most important concept of this question is listView". It's not! Maybe the user wanted a shoulder to cry on or wanted to have the fact that he's missing a semicolon pointed out. The added tags do damage, in my mind, by adding noise in the form of wrongly asserted precision.

TaggerBot is a noble idea, and you should keep building it out and improving it, but keep it on a tight leash, and at current approval levels < 40%, you're hurting stackoverflow by consuming the good will of editors who greatly improve the site.

Conclusion:

Keep iterating on it, have it do at most 2 or 5 edit suggestions per day, and when you can demonstrate 80% or more approval rate, with positive reviews, then after another performance review, we give it the green light and increase throttle to full.

TaggerBot is not ready to be let loose full speed, but you should keep iterating on the code until it can achieve > 60% approval rate. You've picked one of the hardest problems in computer science today, success at this would be a contribution to the field of computer science and machine learning.

Concerns:

Consider this edit: http://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/10095827

The 1-reputation user asked a terrible question and pasted a mountain of wrongly formatted code that doesn't run, and says: "I don't know what to do" or some variation on that. The question should be deleted, closed, or have it's mountain of code trimmed down to 8 lines with a SSCCE.

Instead, Taggerbot examines the question, and sees an invocation of "listView", sure, listview is used in their code, but that's not the main theme of the question, it's a not-important side-show story.

So Taggerbot did damage by claiming that "the most important concept of this question is listView". It's not! Maybe the user wanted a shoulder to cry on or wanted to have the fact that he's missing a semicolon pointed out. The added tags do damage, in my mind, by adding noise in the form of wrongly asserted precision.

TaggerBot is a noble idea, and you should keep building it out and improving it, but keep it on a tight leash, and at current approval levels < 40%, you're hurting stackoverflow by consuming the good will of editors who greatly improve the site.

Conclusion:

Keep iterating on it, have it do at most 2 or 5 edit suggestions per day, and when you can demonstrate 80% or more approval rate, with positive reviews, then after another performance review, then the highest rep users give it the green light and increase throttle to full.

Source Link
Eric Leschinski
  • 153.3k
  • 1
  • 17
  • 16

TaggerBot is not ready to be let loose full speed, but you should keep iterating on the code until it can achieve 60% approval rate.

Concerns:

Consider this edit: http://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/10095827

The 1-reputation user asked a terrible question and pasted a mountain of wrongly formatted code that doesn't run, and says: "I don't know what to do" or some variation on that. The question should be deleted, closed, or have it's mountain of code trimmed down to 8 lines with a SSCCE.

Instead, Taggerbot examines the question, and sees an invocation of "listView", sure, listview is used in their code, but that's not the main theme of the question, it's a not-important side-show story.

So Taggerbot did damage by claiming that "the most important concept of this question is listView". It's not! Maybe the user wanted a shoulder to cry on or wanted to have the fact that he's missing a semicolon pointed out. The added tags do damage, in my mind, by adding noise in the form of wrongly asserted precision.

TaggerBot is a noble idea, and you should keep building it out and improving it, but keep it on a tight leash, and at current approval levels < 40%, you're hurting stackoverflow by consuming the good will of editors who greatly improve the site.

Conclusion:

Keep iterating on it, have it do at most 2 or 5 edit suggestions per day, and when you can demonstrate 80% or more approval rate, with positive reviews, then after another performance review, we give it the green light and increase throttle to full.