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Given the two years between these posts, I'm prepared to offer the users the benefit of the doubt.
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missed that.
Unrequited desire is character building. OriginalGriff
I'm sitting here giving you a standing ovation - Len Goodman
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I nearly did too. It's only because I saw that CG had posted an answer that I checked further.
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Gone.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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He's careered out the forums.
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Also I don't think he is a genuine recruiter. A possible phisher?
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar
Personal Homepage Tech Gossips
The woods are lovely, dark and deep,
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep!
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Just found this spammer[^] who has been spamming this Q&A[^].
0100000101101110011001000111001011101001
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May be they both got the same homework. Now it's time to write a program for Random homework generator
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Chuck N0rris wrote: May be they both got the same homework. Or they are doing teamwork
Chuck Norris
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I saw many cases before looking like two or more people from presumably the same class get identical assignment and all ask the same question at CodeProject. They also seemingly don't see each other's questions and answers. This is all funny, but the questions are never identical. Only in this case.
—SASergey A Kryukov
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I think you really need to look at what you class as abuse here. If they are two people, then it is not abuse.
Consider the situation where poster 1 asks a question, and on the same day but later on, poster 2 also has the question but doesn't post it because she has seen there's already a question on it. Now, people answer poster 1 the following day, but because poster 2 does not get notifications of answers to somebody else's question she has no idea that it's been answered. Poster 2 is now disadvantaged. Is that a good thing?
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I'm not reporting it as the abuse in either case. A person shows source code as one's own. Another person does the same, and the code is exactly the same. (From different countries, aha, but it could be just the artifact of registration.) I don't see how your schema could work. I simply asked them both about it.
—SASergey A Kryukov
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Answer one, post a comment to the poster of the second one pointing them to the first, and report the second as duplicate.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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Not a big deal, of course, but technically the second is not a duplicate, if the persons are different. Never before I saw 100% identical title of the question and identical code. I simply asked each one about it, none of them answered so far.
—SASergey A Kryukov
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Hi,
A malicious user tried to inject some JS script in the comments of my article. But of course It is not interpretted .
My article: XSLT 2.0 in .NET[^]
Is it possible to delete it ?
Kind regards,
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No harm done. At least not to the site. To his reputation? Well, maybe a little harm done.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP
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Perhaps the site only won a small piece of reputation. In my eyes — for sure; the case confirmed that the site is protected against those cheap JavaScript tricks.
Cheers,
—SASergey A Kryukov
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