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Timeline for Are undelete votes effective?

Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0

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Feb 9 at 13:14 answer added Mike Nakis timeline score: 13
Feb 9 at 9:26 comment added NoDataDumpNoContribution "Other ideas?" If you really, really think that the content was good, post it in your name with attribution and after reformulation and see how it goes.
Feb 9 at 3:53 comment added Mike Nakis The problem could perhaps be mitigated by introducing the ability to vote against deletion votes, while there are fewer than 3 deletion votes and the question is therefore still open. As things stand right now, you may see that someone has voted to delete a question, and you may disagree with their vote, but there is nothing you can do about it. Once the question is deleted, there will never be anything you can do about it. Being able to counter-balance deletion votes would certainly help.
Feb 8 at 21:53 answer added starball timeline score: 5
Feb 8 at 16:35 comment added Thom A Looks like, for undeletes, the details of the users are stored in JSON in the Text column, and when it's a multi user the associated User is the Community User, @RyanM . In January this year, there was a whole four posts undeleted by [members of] the community, all the rest (26) were by moderators: SEDE. If we add some conditional logic to your query, to single out single user undeleted (which assumes a moderator) we get a much lower count of community involvement
Feb 8 at 15:51 comment added Ryan M Mod @anatolyg it would indeed include those cases. Here is, roughly, excluding cases where the OP was the undelete voter. That said, I'm not sure how PostHistory handles multi-user actions. rene could likely critique this and/or do a better job.
Feb 8 at 15:40 comment added anatolyg @rene I don't understand that query, but it's very interesting! Does it include the cases when OP deleted and later undeleted the post, unilaterally (these cases are uninteresting)?
Feb 8 at 14:48 history became hot meta post
Feb 8 at 14:27 answer added TylerH timeline score: 27
Feb 8 at 14:02 comment added cigien Participating in SOCVR is a very effective way to have your delete votes actually result in an undeletion. It's certainly better than just casting undelete votes in the wild, in my experience. (Make sure to follow the room guidelines for how to participate there).
Feb 8 at 13:51 comment added francescalus Modify 10k tools so that the "recent" and "most" undelete votes list isn't full of junk which only the post owner thinks is worth undeleting.
Feb 8 at 13:44 comment added rene Less effective over the last years it seems: data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/1818438#graph
Feb 8 at 13:37 history asked anatolyg CC BY-SA 4.0