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replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
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The system keeps a record of when the user bumped into the question block, as demonstrated e.g. by Stack Exchange employees answers to this stats request.

Because of that, issues you ask about can be automatically detected essentially instantly without any user involvement at all.

As far as I can tell system could simply trigger an automatic flag when the following conditions are all met:

  1. The question has got a bounty
  2. There are answers posted prior to the bounty
  3. The question was edited prior to the bounty - say, within a day
  4. The asker has recently bumped into a question block - say, within a week

I think that of existing flag kinds, one about possible vandalism could do (similar to one raised by the system when user deletes many of their answerswhen user deletes many of their answers). Vandalism fits because we suspect that question edit invalidates existing answers.

Note that vandalism flags seem to also well fit to handle urgent issues, as explained hereas explained here:

Flags are split into lists according to type so while vandalism flags aren't prioritised in the same way that spam & rude or abusive flags are; they are easily discoverable in the list of outstanding flags.

The system keeps a record of when the user bumped into the question block, as demonstrated e.g. by Stack Exchange employees answers to this stats request.

Because of that, issues you ask about can be automatically detected essentially instantly without any user involvement at all.

As far as I can tell system could simply trigger an automatic flag when the following conditions are all met:

  1. The question has got a bounty
  2. There are answers posted prior to the bounty
  3. The question was edited prior to the bounty - say, within a day
  4. The asker has recently bumped into a question block - say, within a week

I think that of existing flag kinds, one about possible vandalism could do (similar to one raised by the system when user deletes many of their answers). Vandalism fits because we suspect that question edit invalidates existing answers.

Note that vandalism flags seem to also well fit to handle urgent issues, as explained here:

Flags are split into lists according to type so while vandalism flags aren't prioritised in the same way that spam & rude or abusive flags are; they are easily discoverable in the list of outstanding flags.

The system keeps a record of when the user bumped into the question block, as demonstrated e.g. by Stack Exchange employees answers to this stats request.

Because of that, issues you ask about can be automatically detected essentially instantly without any user involvement at all.

As far as I can tell system could simply trigger an automatic flag when the following conditions are all met:

  1. The question has got a bounty
  2. There are answers posted prior to the bounty
  3. The question was edited prior to the bounty - say, within a day
  4. The asker has recently bumped into a question block - say, within a week

I think that of existing flag kinds, one about possible vandalism could do (similar to one raised by the system when user deletes many of their answers). Vandalism fits because we suspect that question edit invalidates existing answers.

Note that vandalism flags seem to also well fit to handle urgent issues, as explained here:

Flags are split into lists according to type so while vandalism flags aren't prioritised in the same way that spam & rude or abusive flags are; they are easily discoverable in the list of outstanding flags.

replaced http://meta.programmers.stackexchange.com/ with https://softwareengineering.meta.stackexchange.com/
Source Link

The system keeps a record of when the user bumped into the question block, as demonstrated e.g. by Stack Exchange employees answers to this stats requestthis stats request.

Because of that, issues you ask about can be automatically detected essentially instantly without any user involvement at all.

As far as I can tell system could simply trigger an automatic flag when the following conditions are all met:

  1. The question has got a bounty
  2. There are answers posted prior to the bounty
  3. The question was edited prior to the bounty - say, within a day
  4. The asker has recently bumped into a question block - say, within a week

I think that of existing flag kinds, one about possible vandalism could do (similar to one raised by the system when user deletes many of their answers). Vandalism fits because we suspect that question edit invalidates existing answers.

Note that vandalism flags seem to also well fit to handle urgent issues, as explained here:

Flags are split into lists according to type so while vandalism flags aren't prioritised in the same way that spam & rude or abusive flags are; they are easily discoverable in the list of outstanding flags.

The system keeps a record of when the user bumped into the question block, as demonstrated e.g. by Stack Exchange employees answers to this stats request.

Because of that, issues you ask about can be automatically detected essentially instantly without any user involvement at all.

As far as I can tell system could simply trigger an automatic flag when the following conditions are all met:

  1. The question has got a bounty
  2. There are answers posted prior to the bounty
  3. The question was edited prior to the bounty - say, within a day
  4. The asker has recently bumped into a question block - say, within a week

I think that of existing flag kinds, one about possible vandalism could do (similar to one raised by the system when user deletes many of their answers). Vandalism fits because we suspect that question edit invalidates existing answers.

Note that vandalism flags seem to also well fit to handle urgent issues, as explained here:

Flags are split into lists according to type so while vandalism flags aren't prioritised in the same way that spam & rude or abusive flags are; they are easily discoverable in the list of outstanding flags.

The system keeps a record of when the user bumped into the question block, as demonstrated e.g. by Stack Exchange employees answers to this stats request.

Because of that, issues you ask about can be automatically detected essentially instantly without any user involvement at all.

As far as I can tell system could simply trigger an automatic flag when the following conditions are all met:

  1. The question has got a bounty
  2. There are answers posted prior to the bounty
  3. The question was edited prior to the bounty - say, within a day
  4. The asker has recently bumped into a question block - say, within a week

I think that of existing flag kinds, one about possible vandalism could do (similar to one raised by the system when user deletes many of their answers). Vandalism fits because we suspect that question edit invalidates existing answers.

Note that vandalism flags seem to also well fit to handle urgent issues, as explained here:

Flags are split into lists according to type so while vandalism flags aren't prioritised in the same way that spam & rude or abusive flags are; they are easily discoverable in the list of outstanding flags.

woo hoo I noticed and corrected the typo after *Peter Mortensen*. Am I proud of that? You bet!
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gnat
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The system keeps a record of when thewthe user bumped into the question block, as demonstrated e.g. by Stack Exchange employees answers to this stats request.

Because of that, issues you ask about can be automatically detected essentially instantly without any user involvement at all.

As far as I can tell system could simply trigger an automatic flag when the following conditions are all met:

  1. The question has got a bounty
  2. There are answers posted prior to the bounty
  3. The question was edited prior to the bounty - say, within a day
  4. The asker has recently bumped into a question block - say, within a week

I think that of existing flag kinds, one about possible vandalism could do (similar to one raised by the system when user deletes many of their answers). Vandalism fits because we suspect that question edit invalidates existing answers.

Note that vandalism flags seem to also well fit to handle urgent issues, as explained here:

Flags are split into lists according to type so while vandalism flags aren't prioritised in the same way that spam & rude or abusive flags are; they are easily discoverable in the list of outstanding flags.

The system keeps a record of when thew user bumped into the question block, as demonstrated e.g. by Stack Exchange employees answers to this stats request.

Because of that, issues you ask about can be automatically detected essentially instantly without any user involvement at all.

As far as I can tell system could simply trigger an automatic flag when the following conditions are all met:

  1. The question has got a bounty
  2. There are answers posted prior to the bounty
  3. The question was edited prior to the bounty - say, within a day
  4. The asker has recently bumped into a question block - say, within a week

I think that of existing flag kinds, one about possible vandalism could do (similar to one raised by the system when user deletes many of their answers). Vandalism fits because we suspect that question edit invalidates existing answers.

Note that vandalism flags seem to also well fit to handle urgent issues, as explained here:

Flags are split into lists according to type so while vandalism flags aren't prioritised in the same way that spam & rude or abusive flags are; they are easily discoverable in the list of outstanding flags.

The system keeps a record of when the user bumped into the question block, as demonstrated e.g. by Stack Exchange employees answers to this stats request.

Because of that, issues you ask about can be automatically detected essentially instantly without any user involvement at all.

As far as I can tell system could simply trigger an automatic flag when the following conditions are all met:

  1. The question has got a bounty
  2. There are answers posted prior to the bounty
  3. The question was edited prior to the bounty - say, within a day
  4. The asker has recently bumped into a question block - say, within a week

I think that of existing flag kinds, one about possible vandalism could do (similar to one raised by the system when user deletes many of their answers). Vandalism fits because we suspect that question edit invalidates existing answers.

Note that vandalism flags seem to also well fit to handle urgent issues, as explained here:

Flags are split into lists according to type so while vandalism flags aren't prioritised in the same way that spam & rude or abusive flags are; they are easily discoverable in the list of outstanding flags.

Copy edited (e.g. ref. <https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/bump#Verb>).
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Peter Mortensen
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http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/336537/is-there-anything-we-can-do-to-prevent-question-blocked-users-radically-editing?noredirect=1#comment405689_336537
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gnat
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  • 177
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gnat
  • 6.2k
  • 10
  • 109
  • 177
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