The purpose of this comment is to highlight the correction, which otherwise might go unnoticed, and I would not like that somebody stays somewhat misinformed, me being the source.
I sincerely appologise for this error (but fortunately I at least always said I might misremeber and asked for corretions).
]]>However, I do not propose deleting it. Not because I think that the arguments for keeping it are sound but simply because there are enough people who do think so and therefore deleting it will simply change the close-reopen war into a delete-undelete war (sounds like the Cybermen versus the Daleks) and that will be even worse.
So I second the suggestion to close it, lock it, and append a message along the lines of the StackOverflow one.
]]>[Added, this is redundant, did not read carefully, sorry]: However, there would remain the old dumps that would contain the information.
(Or perhaps Anton could even change what to include from the full dump that he has and that of course contains the information; as is visible from the dumps-meta-thread over time some changes where made so it seems certainly technically possible; yet there might be issues with including all delted material, but there might be some way for, automated, selective inclusion; but this is pure speculation on my side, and in view of the existence of the old dumps perhaps not even necessary.)
One more general technical infomation: if one wants something 'read only' only, recently somebody, I believe joro, showed/posted a link to a full 'read only' version of MO running on some other software (OSQA I think). This would/could be usable to preserve material (in various degress of sophistication) too.
]]>@Akhil - I second this idea. As people elsewhere say, there is material that tries to find its way to MO which is better suited to a blog, and perhaps a lengthy blog entry with the current contents of the thread (with votes, if desired) will mean that the thread can be deleted here. This is clearly not a small task, and someone would have to be willing to host it, but this seems to me to be an even better solution than the one at StackOverflow (close and lock and say 'this is not really a good question, despite all the votes'). What functionality do we get by hosting these answers here? Voting? (no one gets rep points, and votes are skewed towards older answers) Sorting by votes/newest/oldest? (if no new entries can be added, this isn't really necessary)
]]>There hasn't been a single deleted big-list question so far and it's not clear there will ever be one. All deletions so far were for much more mundane and transparent reasons. (And moderators have ways of looking for unusual deletions.) Deleting and undeleting are just as easy as closing and reopening, in fact easier since they only require 3 votes (from 10k users) instead of 5 votes (from 3k users).
Experience from the past tells us that talking about rules is almost never productive. Why would you want a rule for a somewhat unique case? This is not math, abstraction and generalization are not desirable here. On the other hand, talking about specific borderline cases can be useful, and that is what meta is for...
]]>@Harry Gindi: "Crusade" is too strong a word, but, yes, I am opposed to soft questions cluttering up MO. I know good mathematicians (and, IIRC, others have mentioned this) who have taken a look at MO but got turned off by the "fluff". The moderators and users have gotten pretty good about quickly closing math questions that do not belong here and have recently gotten stricter about fluffy questions, but old fluffy questions with many upvotes work against MO IMO.
]]>I certainly think that what I proposed at the top of this thread can be improved on. My main concern is that we not go overboard deleting questions. I think we should err on the side of leaving questions undeleted (but still closed).
]]>I think MO is fine the way it is. There are a few soft questions, but not too many, and the number of them seems stable. I see no need to start deleting questions at an increased rate.
]]>I think it's fine to delete obviously spammy questions (including poorly written homework questions). I think the "colorful language" question should definitely not be deleted, for the reasons I give above. I think that because of its drastic nature, deletion should be used very sparingly. In the large majority of cases it suffices to simply close a question and let it drift away into non-front-page obscurity.
]]>If I understand correctly, you are proposing to not merely close the colorful language thread, but to delete it and make in inaccessible/invisible to the large majority of MO users. This strikes me as misguided and a little bit rude, and I hope you will reconsider.
I'm not personally a huge fan of soft big list questions, but many users of this site seem to enjoy them. A large number of people participated int he "colorful language" thread, and it seems rather inconsiderate to them to delete it completely from the site.
A collectively moderated site like MO doesn't work well if people adopt too rigid a standard for what is acceptable. We all should tolerate some differences between what we think MO would be like in an ideal world and what MO is actually like in the real world.
Note that I am NOT arguing that all or most soft big list questions should be allowed. I think it is important that they not be allowed to dominate the site. Closing some of them early, before they get started, is fine. But once a question and garnered a large amount of participation, I think it should be left on the site.
]]>It is difficult for me to make precise what these were or how many these were in total [perhaps somebody who can know this could provide this information]. I noted it only due to the fact that my total answer-count decreased by a little and can only reconstruct something from memory. It affected both mathematical and soft questions [I only know it for a soft question].
To give a rough idea (if my memeory does not fail me) [unfortunately it did partly].
[Added: This one did not dissapear I refound it but had misremevered the title] One was something about the invertability of I - A if I is the identity matrix and A matrix of spectral radius smaller than one.
Another, was some career advice question of a young (teenage?) person.
Both can be considered as off-topic [Added: remains true]. I certainly do not want to personally complain about the deletion. And regarding the general matter have no well-formed opinion, so that I will stay out of this discussion. As said, the purpose of this posting is to provide a data point, to the extent that (or so it seems to me) as of recently it can happen that a question with somewhat well-received answers gets deleted (and I also reconstructed in one case that this is not something specifc to my account/me [Added: not true anymore as it concerned the other question]).
This was suprising to me (to be understood in a neutral sense) [Added: still remains suprising] and I thus provide this information, since under sligthly different circumstances I would not have noticed this at all and so could imagine this being the same for others while possibly being relevant to this discussion. [Added: remains true]
]]>There has recently been a suggestion to delete (erase from the site; make invisible and inaccessible) the "colorful language" thread. I think this is a very bad idea. I propose that MO have a policy of not deleting any questions which have had significant answers or comments.
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