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Klas Lindbäck
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Spam posts are hard to identify since they often require you to follow the links and sometimes read additional unrelated posts by the same author. (I'm not talking about the obvious spam that gets deleted in 1 minute - those posts never reach the review queue. I'm talking about the questions that are part of someones PR campaign for a serious website where the only thing missing is the admission of affiliation.)

The latter is beyond what I consider due diligence. Personally I don't get hung up for failing the occasional review test as long as I catch most of them.

If I see something that rouses my suspicion I always open the question in a new tab. It then becomes obvious whether it is a test and how to pass it.

When I fail, it is usually for one these reasons:

  1. The test is bad. The question is actually not of very poor quality. Or it is an old question that has a positive score although it doesn't follow the current rules.

  2. The test is hard. The question was closed after someone stumbled on information that led to the question being closed.

  3. I disagree. The question may be of questionable quality.

  4. I wasn't focused enough and made the wrong decision.

So, how do I deal with these failures?

  1. sometimes makes me write a question on meta, asking that the question be removed from test consideration.

  2. makes shrug my shoulders and move on.

  3. means that I need to consider whether to change my ways.

  4. usually means that I need a break, so I stop reviewing and do other stuff.

Spam posts are hard to identify since they often require you to follow the links and sometimes read additional unrelated posts by the same author.

The latter is beyond what I consider due diligence. Personally I don't get hung up for failing the occasional review test as long as I catch most of them.

If I see something that rouses my suspicion I always open the question in a new tab. It then becomes obvious whether it is a test and how to pass it.

When I fail, it is usually for one these reasons:

  1. The test is bad. The question is actually not of very poor quality. Or it is an old question that has a positive score although it doesn't follow the current rules.

  2. The test is hard. The question was closed after someone stumbled on information that led to the question being closed.

  3. I disagree. The question may be of questionable quality.

  4. I wasn't focused enough and made the wrong decision.

So, how do I deal with these failures?

  1. sometimes makes me write a question on meta, asking that the question be removed from test consideration.

  2. makes shrug my shoulders and move on.

  3. means that I need to consider whether to change my ways.

  4. usually means that I need a break, so I stop reviewing and do other stuff.

Spam posts are hard to identify since they often require you to follow the links and sometimes read additional unrelated posts by the same author. (I'm not talking about the obvious spam that gets deleted in 1 minute - those posts never reach the review queue. I'm talking about the questions that are part of someones PR campaign for a serious website where the only thing missing is the admission of affiliation.)

The latter is beyond what I consider due diligence. Personally I don't get hung up for failing the occasional review test as long as I catch most of them.

If I see something that rouses my suspicion I always open the question in a new tab. It then becomes obvious whether it is a test and how to pass it.

When I fail, it is usually for one these reasons:

  1. The test is bad. The question is actually not of very poor quality. Or it is an old question that has a positive score although it doesn't follow the current rules.

  2. The test is hard. The question was closed after someone stumbled on information that led to the question being closed.

  3. I disagree. The question may be of questionable quality.

  4. I wasn't focused enough and made the wrong decision.

So, how do I deal with these failures?

  1. sometimes makes me write a question on meta, asking that the question be removed from test consideration.

  2. makes shrug my shoulders and move on.

  3. means that I need to consider whether to change my ways.

  4. usually means that I need a break, so I stop reviewing and do other stuff.

Source Link
Klas Lindbäck
  • 33.3k
  • 13
  • 8

Spam posts are hard to identify since they often require you to follow the links and sometimes read additional unrelated posts by the same author.

The latter is beyond what I consider due diligence. Personally I don't get hung up for failing the occasional review test as long as I catch most of them.

If I see something that rouses my suspicion I always open the question in a new tab. It then becomes obvious whether it is a test and how to pass it.

When I fail, it is usually for one these reasons:

  1. The test is bad. The question is actually not of very poor quality. Or it is an old question that has a positive score although it doesn't follow the current rules.

  2. The test is hard. The question was closed after someone stumbled on information that led to the question being closed.

  3. I disagree. The question may be of questionable quality.

  4. I wasn't focused enough and made the wrong decision.

So, how do I deal with these failures?

  1. sometimes makes me write a question on meta, asking that the question be removed from test consideration.

  2. makes shrug my shoulders and move on.

  3. means that I need to consider whether to change my ways.

  4. usually means that I need a break, so I stop reviewing and do other stuff.