12:25 AM
Does this answer your question? Why can any user edit any other user's question or answer? — Sonic the Anonymous Hedgehog 22 secs ago
The duplicate target answers the main questions you've asked in the title and in the final paragraph here. It also lists out cases where others can/should edit and those where others shouldn't edit - some of your cases do fall into the latter. — Sonic the Anonymous Hedgehog 44 secs ago
1:11 AM
Re "Adding a space before ":" and "?" is simply wrong": Yes, blame Wren & Martin and outdated curricula. — This_is_NOT_a_forum 29 secs ago
5 hours later…
6:25 AM
7:16 AM
When should one revive/edit someone else's post? Always, when there is room for improvement. Overall I feel that edit made the post better but you and Peter are free to have a different opinion, whether or not backed by evidence. — rene 33 secs ago
I'm currently consistently seeing "An error occurred, please try again." when I try and upload an image. Is the new uploader broken? — Martin Smith 53 secs ago
7:55 AM
8:56 AM
It's definitely a bit out of date now though. "Daily builds" is a weird concept. Pretty much you either have CI (build every commit) or you have nothing. "Bug database" would better be called "issue tracker" these days, etc. — Steve Bennett 59 secs ago
9:06 AM
@SteveBennett Yes, and "build in one step" should be called "release in one step". Still the list is much better than nothing. Most scores won't be 100% accurate, but the goal really is simplicity not a fine-grained assessment of development process maturity. — Bergi 47 secs ago
9:46 AM
Yeah, well those are two different, and valid things I think. It's one thing to be able to, in one step, build a site so that other people in the team/stakeholders etc can access it. Another thing if you can actually roll it out to production in one step. Another thing if you can do that in zero steps (continuous deployment)...! — Steve Bennett just now
1 hour later…
11:05 AM
11:22 AM
Hi Khaldi Hamza, welcome to the Stack Exchange Network Meta site! I'm not sure which search brought you here but the problem you describe will not be answered on this specific site. To get an expert's answer for the topic of your question you'll have to find and then re-post on the proper site. Check How do I ask a good question and What is on topic on the target site to make sure your post is in good shape. Your question is definitely off-topic on Meta and is better deleted here. — Journeyman Geek 29 secs ago
2 hours later…
1:10 PM
Hi HowHao, welcome to the Stack Exchange Network Meta site! I'm not sure which search brought you here but the problem you describe will not be answered on this specific site. To get an expert's answer for the topic of your question you'll have to find and then re-post on the proper site. Check How do I ask a good question and What is on topic on the target site to make sure your post is in good shape. Your question is definitely off-topic on Meta and is better deleted here. — Spevacus 26 secs ago
I hope that this problem won’t regressed again and again. Or else, I will frustrated many times. — user1176409 11 secs ago
1:42 PM
2:27 PM
Hi Donald Fraser, welcome to the Stack Exchange Network Meta site! I'm not sure which search brought you here but the problem you describe will not be answered on this specific site. To get an expert's answer for the topic of your question you'll have to find and then re-post on the proper site. Check How do I ask a good question and What is on topic on the target site to make sure your post is in good shape. Your question is definitely off-topic on Meta and is better deleted here. — rene 42 secs ago
It looks like you're trying to get an hardware recommendation? if so, those might fly on hardwarerecs.stackexchange.com/help/on-topic but please go over their help and meta first before you commit to asking. — rene 5 secs ago
3:08 PM
This is correct. Not sure why Imgur did it that way, but we have kept the same "feature" going forward with the Imgur replacement. All three extensions serve the same image. There are not three copies of the image. — Troy Gould ♦ 28 secs ago
3 hours later…
5:59 PM
superuser.com has an unfortunately psychotically evil community. I think, your question could have a pretty nice place there. I think, their most likely reason is that they have no idea to even understand the basics of your question. I think, beside hardwarerecs, also unix.stackexchange.com might have the required number and activity of telephony gurus. — peterh 42 secs ago
2 hours later…
7:48 PM
Josh - Hi, You said to the OP that "we believe this issue is only happening to you". However please note that there were comments from (currently 2) other people saying they are affected with the same symptoms, pipe & Martynas Žiemys. I realise you didn't get the same detailed info from them (I don't think anyone asked them to provide it), but I'm concerned that a reply that this only affects the OP appears to have overlooked those comments. How do you want any other people who believe they are also affected, to report this? TY — SamGibson 11 secs ago
On-topic or off-topic, the question seems both too broad and underspecified. — This_is_NOT_a_forum 28 secs ago
What others have described in the comments have similar symptoms but are not the same issue. The others are more than likely Hotlink Protection. Thanks to the RayID that was provided, the errors from this report are http 400 which is unique to this user's attempts. What's unique about this situation is that loading the image in a different location makes the image visible from that point forth. Other's issues are certain networks will never be able to see the image due to various factors. — Josh Zhang ♦ 44 secs ago
On-topic or off-topic, the question seems both too broad and underspecified. Why wouldn't the answer always be "It depends."? — This_is_NOT_a_forum 59 secs ago
I agree. The resume builder feature was assume too. When I saved it as a PDF file and used it for other job applications, I got a lot of positive feedback about the layout, etc. — Adam Porad 37 secs ago
The Developer Story and the ability to generate and download a CV from it was a great feature. I got lots of positive feedback on it, WRT layout, etc. — Adam Porad 56 secs ago
"Others on your ISP, don't have any issues accessing images on
i.sstatic.net
" – This is a blatant lie. My workplace is an "other on my ISP". I included it in the A location because it experiences the same issue; but it has something to do with me only because "by chance" I am an employee there. And I have just logged in remotely to a Windows computer there, used different browsers, only to confirm Linux is not to blame; the problem is the same and accessing from B "fixes" it. Are you suggesting that various computers know when I (i.e. not "others") am using them? This is ridiculous. — Kamil Maciorowski 21 secs ago8:27 PM
When did you report it? Weekend starts today, so if only today it's expected to wait until next week. Anyway that indeed looks like a merge gone bad, only staff can handle it. — Shadow Wizard Love Zelda 5 secs ago
Respectfully, @Kamil, I'd ask you to assume good faith - I don't think this hostility is justified. The team has spent several hours on the issue, and this is best reasonable conclusion on the balance of the information provided. If you have further information that could help isolate the issue I'm sure it will be of value for this case and future users as well, but I'd ask that you share such information politely. — Slate ♦ 24 secs ago
@Josh How can you determine for certain "Others on your ISP, don't have any issues accessing images"? Do you have log of requests for images with ISP details? — Shadow Wizard Love Zelda 33 secs ago
8:53 PM
We checked the subnets provided in the post and also corroborated with the provided RayID's Using those, we know which ASN and Cloudflare datacenter the traffic is going through. We filtered all traffic from the ASN, and also the Cloudflare DC to make sure others were not getting similar 400 errors. — Josh Zhang ♦ 17 secs ago
@Slate "this is best reasonable conclusion on the balance of the information provided" – From the revision 1 my question states that my workplace is also affected. If the Staff told me the ISP is to blame, I would carefully believe it, because I have no evidence to counter this. But "others on your ISP, don't have any issues"? How can I not call it a lie, when I am and was witnessing the issues on computers that belong to another client of the ISP? And I have explicitly reported this in the question. — Kamil Maciorowski 34 secs ago
@JoshZhang - Thanks for your reply to my first comment. I now understand that you believe others are not seeing the same problem. However it isn't clear to me exactly what other users should do, to differentiate issues. || Reading your reply to me and the OP, I guess they need to check that they are getting an HTTP status 400 when trying to access the image from place X & also get a error message with a RayID in the HTTP response; then check they access the image OK from place Y, and can then access the image OK from place X. Is that sequence enough to identify this specific issue? TY — SamGibson 55 secs ago
@SamGibson if you use developer mode in any of the major browsers it should show you status codes for the images that are loaded. 404, not found of course. 403 is Cloudflare blocking the traffic for a number of reasons one being Hotlink Protection. 400 is a bad request error which is what's happening in this post. — Josh Zhang ♦ 31 secs ago
9:11 PM
@JoshZhang - Thanks, I'm aware of how to get those HTTP status codes. However that doesn't answer my specific question. Therefore I will stop here, but thanks for trying to explain anyway. — SamGibson 52 secs ago
And to be clear: I do believe the Staff were unable to reproduce the error; I do believe they spent several hours on the issue; I suspect there is nothing more they can do and it's fine. I would believe a statement like "we have found no evidence that others on your ISP experienced any issues between timestamp1 and timestamp2". I do not believe "others on your ISP don't have any issues", because I know at least one other has, I wrote this explicitly in the revision 1. So this statement is like gaslighting me. — Kamil Maciorowski 12 secs ago
1 hour later…
10:18 PM
Also, status-norepo doesn't seem correct. You've been able to confirm the presence of the behaviour using your logs, which is about as close as you can get to reproducing network issues like this (short of remoting in, or physically travelling to the site experiencing the issue). status-declined or status-deferred seems more appropriate to me (depending on whether you intend to allocate more resources to the investigation at a later date). — wizzwizz4 37 secs ago
10:43 PM
@wizzwizz4 Tbh [status-norepro] was my recommendation, and I still think it's correct. While we can see that the issue took place, we aren't able to reproduce the issue, and do not have the ability to diagnose a root cause (yet, generously, but we would need more information - status tags are not necessarily permanent). It's sort of tangential to the post, though, happy to chat about it in another place if you've got curiosities — Slate ♦ 57 secs ago
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