I'm just worried that this would lead to an automated question ban. To solve this problem, I feel there should be a way for a question banned user to have moderators and 10K users vote to unban - if the user has gained, say, 100 rep from new posts over the last seven days since the ban, the user should be able to request a vote to unban, where there must be a total of five votes within seven days from moderators and 10K users for the user to be unbanned.
Once unbanned, the user is immune from being banned again for seven days.
This would ensure that legitimate users have a way out of an erroneous question ban while keeping bad users off the site, since at least 100 rep must be gained within one week after the ban to be eligible for this process to begin with.
Obviously I don't know the specifics and may be off; I don't think there's anybody who ever got a question ban on Gaming; if there is, their whines didn't reach me.
The algorithm considers reputation, deleted and closed questions, votes, and possibly other (secret) factors. This is all I know based on what I have read on Meta, and revealing the algorithm would only defeat its purpose.
Perhaps I'll post the unbanning process above as a feature request on Meta...
@Pekkasseriousaccount According to Jeff from the last time this came up, each time involved a lot of equally heavily downvoted questions, and also the only people who typically trigger it "have crayons lodged into their brain"
@Grace I have no doubt that is mostly true. Still, moderation was a perfectly suitable tool to deal with those people in the past. I don't see why account blocking needs to come into the mix - a tool that was designed to decrease the constant flow of bad content on the mother site, not on meta.
@Pekkasseriousaccount That's what the whole "crayons" part was meant to point out - these usually mark bad content, not "highly disagreeable" content.
Disagreeable ideas are spice for discussion. But plain junk (what had hence been observed at the point of the previous inquiry on the matter) is not useful to anyone on the Meta site at all. It's as noise as spam is noise.
The Team has shown diligence in handling when someone new posts a hugely disagreed idea that even leads to the ban - they actually have stepped in to release bans. So I'm pretty sure they're doing their rightest to make sure that we're only using it to filter the absolute junk material, not to censor those who may simply be controversial.
@RebeccaChernoff I know what kinds of questions get flagged - I've flagged over 200 posts on Super User. The process that I proposed for users to get unbanned is intended to ensure that wrongful question bans against well-established users can be lifted without Stack Exchange Team intervention.
@DragonLord, my statement had nothing to do with you, but rereading it, I saw that it could be interpreted as being about you, so I wanted to make sure to clarify, that's all.
Okay, then. I'm assuming that I'm not at risk for a question ban. If wrongful question bans do become a problem, I'll be very happy to propose the vote to unban solution on Meta.
Thanks for all of your help. I'm surprised by how many users have responded... :)
@balpha sadly that's lesson one I'm teaching my young grasshopper
"um, this ajax request isn't getting any data back" ... ok, so reproduce it in the browser ... "uh, that's odd, the static page isn't showing me any data" ... ok, I'll let you fix it from here then.
Yes - it's known as printf() debugging, named after the ubiquitous C function:
Used
to describe debugging work done by
inserting commands that output more or
less carefully chosen status
information at key points in the
program flow, observing that
information and deducing what's ...
I love the "action" command /me found elsewhere, and think it would be fun to have in the chat. A message like:
/me loves the new chat system
Would show up as:
Josh loves the new chat system
Rather than:
Josh: loves the new chat system
I'm trying to think how it would work with ...
Hey, Adobe made PostScript, which was good. Then it made PDF, which was great. Then it made PDF 1.4, which was awesome. Then it made PDF 1.7, which was useless.
My boss is like "if you want a book we can get one" so I was looking, but I'm like "I'm almost where I am comfortable enough with this to start showing others how to write it so shush
he likes to interrupt me when I'm on a roll I think
one thing I don't understand is how the view knows which layout to use to render with
I suppose it uses convention to choose _Layout.cshtml and I should choose a different one in the view that I'm defining tho, I just started to look at that when he came in
My point was that I'm trying to figure out if I go around calling "ActionLink" MVC3 then will people be all oO because I should be calling it a razor method instead