I am puzzled by the technological limits suggested in this post.
Can an administrator not change the password on a user’s account?
If so, a solution would be to change Eugine’s password to something Eugine doesn’t know. Eugine could then not log on and would not be able to either post or upvote/downvote other users.
I am puzzled by the technological limits suggested in this post.
It appears to be a cross between a lack of manpower and a truly terrible codebase and data structures. (I haven’t looked at either myself, for much the same reasons I’ve so far successfully avoided Two Girls One Cup.)
I also meant to mention that administrators could log on to Eugine’s account and revert manually all the now-officially-disliked downvotes. If years of working with coding have taught me one thing, it is that sometimes the fastest way to do something is to do it manually.
I am puzzled by the technological limits suggested in this post.
Can an administrator not change the password on a user’s account?
If so, a solution would be to change Eugine’s password to something Eugine doesn’t know. Eugine could then not log on and would not be able to either post or upvote/downvote other users.
It appears to be a cross between a lack of manpower and a truly terrible codebase and data structures. (I haven’t looked at either myself, for much the same reasons I’ve so far successfully avoided Two Girls One Cup.)
I also meant to mention that administrators could log on to Eugine’s account and revert manually all the now-officially-disliked downvotes. If years of working with coding have taught me one thing, it is that sometimes the fastest way to do something is to do it manually.
Given that mass downvoting continues, it apparently is extremely hard.