Skip to main content
16 events
when toggle format what by license comment
Dec 10 at 17:26 comment added Abdul Aziz Barkat @Sal-SE I'm quite happy to see a dev partaking actively in moderation, perhaps the mods might see some useful stuff coming out from your activity. I don't particularly mind the flag decline, I'd already reviewed it major changes along with the flag anyway :P
Dec 10 at 17:21 comment added Sal-SE StaffMod Just wanted to mention I've hence split out my personal SO account from my work account. I'd like to participate in SG non-authoritatively going forward. I wasn't let go or anything 😅 And it was entirely my own idea to do this based on the standards I set for myself.
Dec 10 at 17:15 comment added Sal @NotTheDr01ds SO devs are allowed to participate in Mod actions. I was dealing with a bunch of flags that day, trying to be helpful 🙃, and I just happened to handle this flag. The fact that it was AIGC related was a coincidence.
Dec 10 at 15:46 comment added NotTheDr01ds @Sal If you don't mind me asking, what was a staff member doing handling AIGC flags on SO? I'm not familiar with your role, so apologies for any confusion.
Dec 10 at 14:07 comment added Sal StaffMod I was the person who incorrectly declined this flag. This was due to my misunderstanding of how SG is meant to handle AGC. Apologies for the confusion folks, I will make sure not to make this mistake in the future.
Dec 7 at 13:29 comment added Cody Gray Mod This... was an incorrectly declined flag. The question not being posted does not solve the plagiarism problem. In fact, the question was posted, that's how you were able to view it. It's just that it was posted in the Staging Ground, not on the main site. Plagiarized content doesn't belong in SG, either. This much should be obvious. I hope that the person who declined the flag will say more about it, but I can say that this decline does not represent the general position of the elected moderator team.
Dec 7 at 1:24 comment added JaMiT Relevant reference: What to do when plagiarism is discovered (not in the Staging Ground). One detail I would call out is that editing to fix the plagiarism (instead of flagging) is listed as an acceptable one-off solution in minor cases.
Dec 6 at 21:31 answer added Karl Knechtel timeline score: 8
Dec 6 at 21:06 comment added Karl Knechtel I honestly don't think it occurs to most students that the content of their assignment handouts is subject to the same attribution requirements as the sources they use to do the work.
Dec 6 at 17:15 comment added Drew Reese Interestingly, there was another discussion regarding a declined R/A flag on "gibberish" in Staging Ground where it seemed the consensus was that that was in error due to a "mis-click" and to flag posts over just marking them as "requires major changes". I argued similarly that "this is what SG is for..." and that flagging wasn't necessarily the best first action. This is exactly why flagging often feels like a crap-shoot. Even if we are successful in updating guideline I won't hold my breath hoping they are consistently applied.
Dec 6 at 9:49 answer added Gimby timeline score: 3
Dec 6 at 8:07 history became hot meta post
Dec 6 at 7:11 history edited Abdul Aziz Barkat CC BY-SA 4.0
Remove repetition
Dec 6 at 7:08 comment added Abdul Aziz Barkat @Marijn The particular question I flagged had quite a lot of content from a course, the user wanted to ask about an error they got while following the course but instead of just asking about that they copied lots of content unnecessarily from it without proper attribution.
Dec 6 at 7:06 comment added Marijn It seems rather unusual that a question is plagiarized, what would the asker gain by that?
Dec 6 at 6:41 history asked Abdul Aziz Barkat CC BY-SA 4.0