As most readers here probably already know, there is a script that automatically deletes questions based on some criteria, known as the roomba script.
But this meta-question: “Community” bot deleted my reopened question, highlighted an interesting case where roomba automatically deleted a question that been explicitly marked for undeletion by human voters.
This seems to be a case of priority inversion, where the script always wins in the end, unless the score of the question changes enough during this small interim until the next execution.
So this raised a question in my mind: How many times has this happened on Stack Overflow? Is this something that only happens rarely, or do most roomba-deleted-and-then-undeleted questions end up being deleted again, with the script nullifying valid votes from humans?
The data points I am looking for are in a given time-frame:
- Number of questions posted
- Number of questions deleted by roomba
- Number of questions deleted by roomba that where undeleted at a later time at least once
- Number of questions deleted by roomba that where undeleted at a later time at least once, and then deleted by roomba again.
RemoveAbandonedQuestions
); I undeleted it, then it was roomba'd again the week after, until I had to upvote it to prevent being roomba'd. The moral of the story is: forget the undeletion, the questions themselves have to get out from roomba's condition first.deleted:1
.