Timeline for New answer, then Top answer update, then it looks like duplicate answers
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
10 events
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Oct 18, 2022 at 11:37 | comment | added | mirekphd | The good news is that the modellers can ignore small diffs here (and concentrate on those that roughly double the answer in size over optimal historical aggregation periods), because old answer is usually kept unchanged, usually with special keywords like "before"/"old"/"original"/"<=" (another distinguishing feature separating it from normal edits)). And conditioning on other posters content and actions (sequence of events) would be probably much stronger related than relying on champion's edits history (which can be of course entirely independent and original as you pointed out). | |
Oct 18, 2022 at 11:16 | comment | added | Cœur | Good luck simply reviewing my sole edits. ^_^ | |
Oct 18, 2022 at 10:52 | comment | added | mirekphd | I think a Kaggle competition could do the job nicely (and inexpensively: with prizes being SO reps / bounties and gold/silver/bronze "Kaggler" badges). | |
Oct 18, 2022 at 10:18 | comment | added | Robert Longson | Feel free to create one and test it by applying it to all the existing answer edits using SEDE. If you can prove it works flawlessly I'm sure it would be considered. | |
Oct 18, 2022 at 10:16 | comment | added | mirekphd | OK, but I bet an ML model could flag edits automatically as those that incorporate existing answers, using text similarity measures, references made to other posters nicks (which is used in attributions) and aided by a user-generated feature flag: "This answer incorporates another answer". To avoid overload with many small edits, I would use periodic polling, e.g. randomly spaced daily updates of model's input data. | |
Oct 18, 2022 at 10:07 | comment | added | Robert Longson | sounds like a lot of overhead when we have many people simply able to edit without review right now. We'd need to approve all edits, that's not scalable. | |
Oct 18, 2022 at 10:04 | comment | added | mirekphd | I agree that this is possible, but the academic publishing world has dealt with it. One solution would be some form of peer review on permitting such co-authorship, with extra voting system (like currently on closing or reopening). | |
Oct 18, 2022 at 10:02 | history | edited | mirekphd | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
more clarity
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Oct 18, 2022 at 10:01 | comment | added | Robert Longson | And wouldn't that encourage pointless trivial edits that don't add anything at all to the answer just to get a share of the reward? | |
Oct 18, 2022 at 9:58 | history | answered | mirekphd | CC BY-SA 4.0 |