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Ian Kemp
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Is this edit a reasonable interpretation of "add updates as the post ages"?

Absolutely not.

The question posed is ultimately a very narrow one, and answers to it should thus be equivalently focused. The original answer conformed to this: it was short, sweet, and to the point. (I would argue that it would have been even better if it had consisted only of its first sentence.)

The edits made to it afterwards completely removed that focus. Now instead of being an answer to the question as asked, it was an answer plus some other bits and bobs that are only tangentially relevant to what was asked and almost certainly won't be relevant to people looking for the direct answer to the question. In other words, it's gone from being a simple-but-effective answer to a bloated piece of waffle that most people aren't going to read past the first sentence anyway.

The justification made by that editor for their hack job is pathetic. The question is ultimately a historical one, this particular piece of history is known and won't change, so there is no justification to change the answer because it's "out of date". Their argument to authority about the number of edits they've made doesn't fly with me either... based on their behaviour on this answer, I don't see 500+ good edits, I see 500+ edits that need to be investigated and possibly rolled back. "It takes 20 years to build a reputation and 5 minutes to ruin it"...

Thank you for noticing and helping to preventkeep this vandalismsite clean.

Is this edit a reasonable interpretation of "add updates as the post ages"?

Absolutely not.

The question posed is ultimately a very narrow one, and answers to it should thus be equivalently focused. The original answer conformed to this: it was short, sweet, and to the point. (I would argue that it would have been even better if it had consisted only of its first sentence.)

The edits made to it afterwards completely removed that focus. Now instead of being an answer to the question as asked, it was an answer plus some other bits and bobs that are only tangentially relevant to what was asked and almost certainly won't be relevant to people looking for the direct answer to the question. In other words, it's gone from being a simple-but-effective answer to a bloated piece of waffle that most people aren't going to read past the first sentence anyway.

The justification made by that editor for their hack job is pathetic. The question is ultimately a historical one, this particular piece of history is known and won't change, so there is no justification to change the answer because it's "out of date". Their argument to authority about the number of edits they've made doesn't fly with me either... based on their behaviour on this answer, I don't see 500+ good edits, I see 500+ edits that need to be investigated and possibly rolled back. "It takes 20 years to build a reputation and 5 minutes to ruin it"...

Thank you for noticing and helping to prevent this vandalism.

Is this edit a reasonable interpretation of "add updates as the post ages"?

Absolutely not.

The question posed is ultimately a very narrow one, and answers to it should thus be equivalently focused. The original answer conformed to this: it was short, sweet, and to the point. (I would argue that it would have been even better if it had consisted only of its first sentence.)

The edits made to it afterwards completely removed that focus. Now instead of being an answer to the question as asked, it was an answer plus some other bits and bobs that are only tangentially relevant to what was asked and almost certainly won't be relevant to people looking for the direct answer to the question. In other words, it's gone from being a simple-but-effective answer to a bloated piece of waffle that most people aren't going to read past the first sentence anyway.

The justification made by that editor for their hack job is pathetic. The question is ultimately a historical one, this particular piece of history is known and won't change, so there is no justification to change the answer because it's "out of date". Their argument to authority about the number of edits they've made doesn't fly with me either... based on their behaviour on this answer, I don't see 500+ good edits, I see 500+ edits that need to be investigated and possibly rolled back. "It takes 20 years to build a reputation and 5 minutes to ruin it"...

Thank you for noticing and helping to keep this site clean.

Source Link
Ian Kemp
  • 29.8k
  • 12
  • 116
  • 167

Is this edit a reasonable interpretation of "add updates as the post ages"?

Absolutely not.

The question posed is ultimately a very narrow one, and answers to it should thus be equivalently focused. The original answer conformed to this: it was short, sweet, and to the point. (I would argue that it would have been even better if it had consisted only of its first sentence.)

The edits made to it afterwards completely removed that focus. Now instead of being an answer to the question as asked, it was an answer plus some other bits and bobs that are only tangentially relevant to what was asked and almost certainly won't be relevant to people looking for the direct answer to the question. In other words, it's gone from being a simple-but-effective answer to a bloated piece of waffle that most people aren't going to read past the first sentence anyway.

The justification made by that editor for their hack job is pathetic. The question is ultimately a historical one, this particular piece of history is known and won't change, so there is no justification to change the answer because it's "out of date". Their argument to authority about the number of edits they've made doesn't fly with me either... based on their behaviour on this answer, I don't see 500+ good edits, I see 500+ edits that need to be investigated and possibly rolled back. "It takes 20 years to build a reputation and 5 minutes to ruin it"...

Thank you for noticing and helping to prevent this vandalism.