Skip to main content

Timeline for It's time to bury [digg]

Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0

17 events
when toggle format what by license comment
Feb 13, 2019 at 4:18 comment added Jeremy Banks @andrewtweber Stack Overflow is supposed to be curated and maintained. I was going through and editing a bunch of old questions and ran into these. I figured it made more sense to get rid of them than try to improve them. But if we do keep them, we need to maintain them, or else we're polluting the internet instead of making it a better place.
Feb 13, 2019 at 1:07 comment added andrewtweber How did this even come up? (Serious question) I feel like for an obsolete API like this, it would never be bumped, or show up in search results, or even get clicks from Google. The questions and answers will be ignored and will "go away" by themselves. So like @Laurel says why expend effort on them?
Feb 12, 2019 at 22:57 comment added wizzwizz4 @rene For the record, I asked on Retrocomputing meta; if the answer is no then DON'T post digg questions on Retrocomputing!
Feb 12, 2019 at 22:40 comment added rene @wizzwizz4 let's hope it is not ...
Feb 12, 2019 at 22:38 comment added wizzwizz4 @rene Thanks for the publicity, but I have no idea whether that would be on-topic!
Feb 11, 2019 at 21:16 comment added Jeremy Banks @Malky.Kid Deleted questions can be restored, but I don't think there's any precedent for mass-undeletion like that. We wouldn't generally delete on-topic well-asked questions that might be useful to future visitors, so it doesn't come up. I suggest that this is a rare case where we can be confident that nobody will need this information in the future.
Feb 11, 2019 at 19:28 comment added Malcolm Salvador whenever tags get active again, do burninated questions relating to it get restored? I know closed questions can be reopened but not sure on deleted ones
Feb 11, 2019 at 6:06 comment added Jonathan Leffler It's interesting that the yahoo-finance tag is still being actively used. There are 750+ questions with the tag, and quite a number asked this year (15 by my count). Sometimes they have other tags — people aren't good at reading tag summaries, or ignore them even if they do read them. Or it has somehow morphed into a tag for the generic finance.yahoo.com site rather than the finance.yahoo.com/d/quotes… service that used to exist but reputedly doesn't any more (curl indicates a redirect — but the redirect to http://download.finance.yahoo.com/ doesn't resolve.
Feb 11, 2019 at 5:59 history edited Jonathan Leffler
edited tags
Feb 10, 2019 at 18:10 comment added user4639281 Somewhat relevant is the demise of parse.com and the fate of the corresponding tag on Stack Overflow proper since then. If any question is specific to the API and isn't generally applicable otherwise, it can be closed as not reproducible because the problems described can literally never be reproduced again unless the service were somehow restored.
Feb 10, 2019 at 10:07 comment added rene For historical curiosity we have retrocomputing.se ...
Feb 10, 2019 at 4:21 comment added Jeremy Banks @Laurel Good cross-ref, thanks. Generally, Stack Overflow wants to have content that makes the internet better. This is a small but relatively clear case of useless content that nobody wants to land on from Google. COBOL (an example used in the other question) was an extremely widely-used language and answers about it could be relevant historically and in understanding old site. The yahoo-finance tags had hundreds of questions and would have taken a lot more work to clean up, and the API was used for enough serious purposes that the questions are more likely to still have useful information.
Feb 10, 2019 at 4:19 comment added Machavity Mod @Laurel I would make that an answer so it can be voted on
Feb 10, 2019 at 4:11 comment added Laurel This has happened to a tag before and the decision was to edit the tag wiki but not take any moderation action on the questions with the tag. Is there a problem other than the service being obsolete that makes this something that needs action? Why should we expend our finite resources (votes, time) on this?
Feb 10, 2019 at 3:48 comment added Jeremy Banks I am also usually for preserving content, but this seemed like a particularly pointless case. There is some historical curiosity, but I'm not sure that's enough.
Feb 10, 2019 at 3:46 comment added Cody Gray Mod Normally, I'd say that obsolescence of a technology is not grounds for closure, much less deletion. However, I guess web APIs may be an exception. When they're no longer supported, they become completely unusable and worthless.
Feb 10, 2019 at 3:36 history asked Jeremy Banks CC BY-SA 4.0