Skip to main content
18 events
when toggle format what by license comment
Nov 21 at 4:50 comment converted from answer SamB Or just nuke discussions from orbit.
Nov 20 at 8:57 answer added Journeyman Geek timeline score: 6
Nov 16 at 10:41 history edited Ryan MMod CC BY-SA 4.0
Apparently some people are unclear on what Discussions is, so add a link
Oct 29 at 12:16 comment added Erik A For now, we can do little. If you're an EU citizen, you can petition your EU reps to have Stack Exchange recognized as a large online platform under the digital services act, and then they'd have a substantial liability associated with failing to moderate illegal content.
Oct 28 at 15:25 comment added Sayse At this point, just forget about them. We're due another update on discussions where feedback will be given and filed next to all the other feedback. But at least they're thankful
Oct 28 at 14:33 comment added Lundin The rules of responsibilities of a publisher haven't changed with the dawn of Internet. If there is an SO post advertising illegal content, then SO is legally responsible. Simply call the police and they will take it from there.
Oct 28 at 9:04 comment added l4mpi What you can do is very simple: stop curating, stop flagging, stop doing free cleanup work for SE. When the garbage is piled higher and higher and discussions looks like an unprotected guestbook on some abandoned web1.0 site, SE will probably be compelled to act.
Oct 26 at 17:20 comment added Karl Knechtel When we say "illegal" here, which jurisdiction is relevant?
Oct 26 at 13:11 answer added Laurel timeline score: 33
Oct 26 at 13:07 history edited Laurel CC BY-SA 4.0
edited title
Oct 26 at 12:35 comment added Thom A If th answer is "nothing" then that is an answer, @Cody . I'd probably downvote such an answer as well as accept it, because as much as i don't agree with that being the solution, doesn't mean it's not.
Oct 26 at 12:22 comment added VLAZ @ray spam is not tolerated, though.
Oct 26 at 12:20 comment added ray I came across this meta answer and tried to trace back the ToS but I cannot locate the relevant segment of illegal content. I also see this MSE post. From my understanding, StackExchange does not care about illegal content on the site, at least now.
Oct 26 at 12:17 comment added Cody Gray Mod Yes, that's all 100% true. I agree that Discussions was only half-implemented and has no effective moderation tools. I further agree that the company doesn't seem to care about this, because they've been told about since the very beginning, yet the problem keeps getting worse with absolutely no attention paid to it. But your question is not phrased as a bug report on Discussions. You're asking a very concrete question in your last paragraph, which is all that I was addressing in my comment. I don't think I want normal users to be able to do anything on spam other than flagging it.
Oct 26 at 12:15 history became hot meta post
Oct 26 at 12:09 comment added Thom A The problem, @Cody , is we both know that those flags are entirely separate to mod flags for the main site, and mods can only check Discussion flags by activitely checking Discussions, which there is no incentive for you to do. If Spam flags worked, then it wouldn't take over 2 hours to remove illegal content.
Oct 26 at 11:59 comment added Cody Gray Mod "Apart from flagging as spam..." I mean, that's exactly what you're supposed to do. That's all you or any other normal user is ever expected to do. So this question makes little sense. Unless the answer is to block Discussions so you never see the trash pile. If the company doesn't want to make it better, that's their choice, isn't it? What would you possibly expect anyone else to do about it? Would we even want users to be able to do anything else about it? (I mean, you could spin up more accounts, gain some rep on each, and then raise multiple spam flags, but that's abuse.)
Oct 26 at 11:54 history asked Thom A CC BY-SA 4.0