Yeah it's hit or miss on getting an email. The email means hardblock and no emails means soft block is a myth. Even Amazon seems clueless about why people don't get emails for all blocks. They consider all blocks the same though I assume the ones actually held against you are ones where they write a note like poor work, or this guy cheated me or something and not ones where they block and say nothing but who knows, we can't tell from our end anyway.
Yeah. Just double checked. The video study was a joint MIT-Rochester thing and they used that requester account. Maybe that email won't be any good. Maybe it will. I'm sure Rochester has an IRB board. If not, something to tell the grand kids.
You clearly did watch him wax poetic about relationships, hes too prudish for a prostitute or dirty dancing for that matter.
I would caution on getting out the pitchforks, simply because these rejections are auto, there is probably no one there to answer any emails and based on his approval history I would not expect a quick response. The hits I have done have either went to AA or he approved them when he put out the next batch. Hes a doctoral candidate working at a University so I expect this to get taken care of.
Yeah, definitely hold off a few days before getting too angry. Although, how can they be auto rejected if some of us still have them pending?
This. Also, if it was automated, some of us would not have gotten the "Rejected because user blocked" explanation. Impossible for em to automatically block us.
Hey adaaaam, could use some coding help. What would I change to change the A and S keys to F1 and F2? I just did the obvious and changed the visible ones but that didn't work. document.addEventListener( "keydown", kas, false); function kas(i) { if ( i.keyCode == 65 || i.keyCode == 97 ) { //A or npad 1 $('.promptInput').eq(0).click(); $('input[id="save"]').eq(0).click();} if ( i.keyCode == 83 || i.keyCode == 98 ) { //S or npad 2 $('.promptInput').eq(1).click(); $('input[id="save"]').eq(0).click();} }