@RobertColumbia re: cseducators post that you commented on, we were just testing some stuff in Charcoal HQ. There's nothing wrong with it. Also, in the future, Charcoal is prolly a better place to ask questions like that.
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Bad keyword in body, blacklisted website in body, potentially bad ns for domain in body, potentially bad keyword in body, potentially bad keyword in title (199): How to buy Cenforce 150mg? by Fatoumata Sylla on apple.SE
@ɪBᴜɢ First, 10k users require an extra step to see what was behind the answer. Second, some users may think you posted that and thus flag you for trolling.
@SonictheInclusiveHedgehog when it's deleted it just means "no value here, don't see", so I disagree with your first standpoint. Second, 10k MSE users aren't any innocent so that one's also invalid
@EKons why, because they're "too big"? In Israel we got similar situation, one giant supermarkets company with annual income of like 4B NIS, and few other smaller companies, not reaching this combined. But don't think many boycott the big company just for being almost a monopoly, they do have fair prices.
@ArtOfCode I'd have to manually add thousands of spaces, though. I can get around the problem by copying the text from the post preview rather than the actual text box, because in the preview it all appears on one line.
could also paste it with the line breaks by surrounding it with `` backticks, which allow new lines, and then .split('\n').map(s => s + ' ').join('\n')
@SonictheInclusiveHedgehog eeeh. Makes it sound like they're a bad person for not doing it.
If you read back up there ^, there's me saying "I don't want to do this thing" and then you're coming straight back with "it'd be good if you did this thing anyway"
no, technically, you didn't tell me I have to do it, but... that doesn't come across as considerate of others' time
@Magisch oh. Well, from my few visits to Lidl in Germany I didn't see anything hinting about it, the cashiers all sat down comfortably, didn't appear tired or sad at all, etc.
In Israel we had big issue with cashiers suffering horrible conditions, but it was dealt with.
It's more the working hours, how useless corporate is, the managing style, and the fact that they get garbage benefits (pretty much legal minimum on everything)
Change of topic... what would you say/think if you found out the head of your country secret intelligence agency (or not secret, equivalent to NSA) was under surveillance from a third party without knowing about it?
@Magisch yeah.... and when this was exposed, he claims it's "not a big deal". buh
Let's see if it has English version already... yes there is
I mean... in his place I'd pack my things and retire asap, ashamed such thing happened.
But people love to stick to their place of power.
@ɪBᴜɢ if you edit your answers to hide some shame it's legit to a point, but NOT when you put pointless jiberish in there, that's abuse and can be flagged as such. Instead you can write "I misunderstood the question, answer is removed" or something along those lines. Just saying. :)
Keyboard-only access is an important part of accessibility. In my case, it's simply because my mouse has stopped working, but there are many people who rely on webpages being keyboard-only friendly to navigate the web.
Stack Exchange chat completely fails.
Some extremely basic things are imposs...
I find I'm doing the Unix command completion/IRC name completion thing where I type a few letters of the username and hit tab when I'm entering comments.
Please consider adding a bit of JavaScript code that:
When focus is on a comment input box
When tab is pressed
If the preceeding 'word' is '...
A settlement; an area with residential districts, shops and amenities, and its own local government; especially one larger than a village and smaller than a city.
Any more urbanized center than the place of reference.
(Britain, historical) A rural settlement in which a market was held at least once a week.
The residents (as opposed to gown: the students, faculty, etc.) of a community which is the site of a university.
(colloquial) Used to refer to a town or similar entity under discussion.
@Mithrandir @Shadow We have some spots here (mostly in rural mountain areas) where the named town is a single farm with a few extra houses build by the inheritants.
Okay, this just happened: Invites have been sent to attend an online assessment about Information Security. Registration with email and password is mandatory. In the reminder email they included a list with all participants ... and their chosen password ...
@rene Careful with that though, the rules for profiles are much more lenient than for actual posts. Unless it's NSFW, we usually don't do anything unless the user starts posting spam, I've been told ;)
@Tinkeringbell Thanks! I did some investigation and it seems that it keeps hitting the "5 answers from new users within 24 hours" requirement. So this means that every time a new user posts an answer, it will be protected. I think you should escalate that to the Community Team.
@Tinkeringbell I'm aware of that. Mods have the ability to escalate requests to the Community Team (according to an answer by Monica Cellio), and thus can get them to bump up the priority of that request.
What Monica means is probably that we sometimes ping someone to say 'hey, are you aware of this thing, can it be done'. It makes no sense to do that for main meta.
> Tinkeringbell Thanks! I did some investigation and it seems that it keeps hitting the "5 answers from new users within 24 hours" requirement. So this means that every time a new user posts an answer, it will be protected. I think you should escalate that to the Community Team.
@Magisch I said, "escalate the fact that it will be protected automatically whenever a new user posts an answer". Wasn't referring to the original request there.
This is especially a problem for contests being run on this site.
Take, for example, the most recent contest. If you look at its revision history, you'll see a very long and drawn-out war between the Community user and humans (mods and 15k+ users).
After some investigation, I discovered that th...
@ShadowWizard nope; they're definitely not "too big" here in Greece, compared to other supermarkets; it's for political reasons... not explaining more right now :P
> This noun comes from the name of Charles C. Boycott, an English land agent in 19th century Ireland who refused to reduce rents for his tenant farmers. As a result, the local residents did not want to have any dealings with him. Boycotts are an effective way to use your spending dollars to affect change.
Online dictionaries are such a life saver nowadays!
@JourneymanGeek reminds me of discussion I had with my kids. They heard about the Big Ben clock, and the daughter said it's not fair. In Hebrew "Ben" means "boy". So she asked why there's no famous clock for "girl"... and in Hebrew, girl is "bat", which would make it Big Bat. But then I told my children that isn't a good name because that same word can mean something totally different... </end-due-to-@Derpy-might-flag> :P