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Question for moderators: What close vote did the OP of this question cast - in particular, did they vote to close as duplicate? Wondering why it wasn't auto-closed by Community.
01:16
@RyanM Even if the OP voted to close as a duplicate, I don't think it gets closed by Community if the OP votes to close as opposed to accepting the duplicate suggestion.
That was my guess, I was going to suggest that as a bug report/feature request, but wasn't certain that was what happened.
So you want to propose that the OP gets a binding vote when they vote to close as duplicate?
@cigien Yep. Seems like they really should, since they get a binding vote accepting a duplicate...at the very least, they should when voting to close as duplicate when it's already been suggested.
@Droid OP has edited in code; does that resolve the issue?
@RyanM For the first part, that's been proposed before and shot down; that OPs would start closing their questions once they were answered, is one reason to not allow that. The second seems reasonable; the OP should get a binding vote when voting to close as a duplicate that has already been suggested. Bit of a corner case, since the popup to accept the suggested target is fairly obvious, so probably won't get implemented, but there doesn't seem to be any harm in having that feature.
I would fully support OPs closing duplicates even AFTER the question was answered.
Answerers should get in the habit of looking for duplicates BEFORE answering.
01:29
@cigien Looks like there's already a feature request for it. As for the first part, do you know where it was shot down? It seems like rather than being shot down, it's actually possible with 15 rep if you go through the right steps.
But yeah I don't see any reason to prevent OPs closing as dupes after they get answered, especially given the number of times people answer with "your answer is here [link to other question]" and then copy that answer
@RyanM I'm not sure what you mean by it being possible with 15 rep. Doesn't that still require other users to vote to close? Also, this is the feature-request that's most recent that I was thinking of, and animuson's comment in particular.
@RyanM duplicate
Thanks!
@cigien I think that feature request is for any VTC reason, not just duplicate. I'm only talking about duplicates. As far as still being able to do so unilaterally, the user in that link voted to close their question as a duplicate, then accepted their own duplicate suggestion, causing Community to close it.
(I do agree that giving unilateral close votes to OPs for non-dupe reasons is bad)
01:48
@RyanM Oh, I see, I thought you were talking about all kinds of close-votes. Not sure why I thought that, it's not what you said :( Yeah, voting to close as duplicate should be binding for one's own posts. You're right about being able to do it indirectly, which seems odd. I don't see any particular issue with it, but it does seem like a hack.
02:02
@cigien Why close a feature request as a duplicate of a support question without marking it as ? Sure, it might be and the person pointed to a support question to show them what they should do instead, but "please implement this feature", which that question clearly and explicitly asks for, isn't "with the system as it is, what should I be doing now". sigh mod-flagged asking for resolution, probably just add .
02:12
@Makyen Since only mods can add the [status-declined] flag, and none of the close voters were mods, it was probably just an oversight not to add that tag. I agree that the closure is odd, and that tag should be added if the question isn't reopened. I'm curious how your flag is going to get handled now :)
Holy dang, Martijn killed off a 62up0down redundant answer from my flag. I didn't know if my request was going to be considered. Cool. stackoverflow.com/a/32436450/2943403
Is this general computing?
 
2 hours later…
04:53
I'm always pleasantly surprised how often my canned comment for people trying to debug a crash on Android with no stack trace results in a "hey that helped me fix it"-type comment :-)
It sparks joy.
05:50
How should a question be handled that asked a programming question, but received exclusively general computing answers? Assume that the answers are sufficiently highly scored that there would be no hope of them being deleted without moderator intervention.
06:19
Help on this duplicate question: stackoverflow.com/questions/27753830/…
07:04
this question is off-topic?
this is a troll right?
@Droid looks like a recommend question to me
@RyanM Maybe leave them? I can picture some of them being helpful because they are non obvious. Fictional example: Q: "How do I make if to work" A: "Change the system locale because <somehow it affects it>"
Although, maybe that's not the case you're talking about.
Although what you do bring up makes me think of the Outdated answers. Because this seems like a related concept in some respects - it's answers that might not be what you expect for a question. Not sure how to call them. In the future, after the Outdated answers are handled, maybe we handle those. Hopefully as well as Potentially Dangerous Answers Be Ware!
Mark them with a banner or something perhaps might be a good start.
07:32
@SurajRao It also looks kind of trollish to me. They take the code from the other answer and insert some gibberish. But it's not so obvious, so either custom flag or get rid of it via delete votes maybe.
@SurajRao Also, "deploy Java" but ?
cant make out what it is about @VLAZ to edit tag
@VLAZ The question was (paraphrasing heavily) "How to download a M3U8 playlist using Objective-C on iOS." The 3 top-voted answers, in order, are "Use the VLC desktop client," "Use FFmpeg from the command line," and "Use JDownloader2 [a desktop GUI app]"
Yeah, I don't think you need to. Just reinforcing the unclearness.
@RyanM Ah, the one with the MSE question about it...
Yeah, that one seems...odd.
Yup, hence being a bit vague and not linking it :-)
I don't know if this problem actually happens much or if that one question just went way off the rails
07:36
I just left a comment there saying that in general answers not sticking to tags are OK, however, that doesn't seem like a general case.
The question is perfectly fine; the answers are wildly off-topic
Yeah, I agree.
I'm sort of wondering if it's worth mod-flagging
I'd say allowing some answers is OK but too many is too many. I'd refrain from defining what is the threshold for "too many", though.
The problem is it's become a reference for how to download such files in a general computing sense, and I don't know if removing that is appropriate
If it were the question that was asked, I'd just close it and not vote to delete, but that doesn't really apply here
07:39
Yep, I agree. If I want to find images on the computer programmatically, I'd prefer not getting an answer "use the file explorer"
Especially if all answers are variations of that
@VLAZ Yeah, I gave an answer to that effect - basically that it's generally fine but this particular case is bad because the answers ignored the entire premise of the site
Hmm, I mulled it over and I think for that question the best thing is to close or lock it. Right now it's treated as a recommendation dumping ground which is exactly why we have the recommendation close reason.
The alternative is to delete all answers because the question itself is fine.
But the latter things feels iffy.
"We didn't like the answers, so we removed them. Try again, I guess"
I custom flagged it, giving both options and letting the moderator pick their favorite.
08:21
I wish questions didn't get an automatic undelete vote for inconsequential edits. Just like they probably shouldn't get a reopen vote for the same thing.
Well, they don't get a reopen vote. Just a reopen review.
Don't they also get a vote?
Actually, you're right.
no..only push to the queue
At any rate - shouldn't happen with deleted questions.
Like this one. It's fundamentally not an SO question. Deleting one character doesn't make it suitable.
On the one hand, TIL, and that's kind of silly. On the other hand, I imagine it's a workaround for the fact that SE lacks an undelete queue, so there's no other way to show it to anyone.
08:27
I found it in the 10k tools looking at the questions for undeletion. Most of them shown there are like that - deleted question, there is some edit that doesn't make it better, it has an undelete vote now.
It's the same issue I have with the reopen queue.
Most of the problem with the reopen queue is that many of the useless edits aren't coming from the OPs.
Lots of people "touch up" typos or grammar in closed questions and generate useless reopen reviews, while also denying the OP a chance to fix the question and get it reopened.
Part of that problem is that edits reviewers approve those edits...
For an extended version of this rant, see my meta question on the matter :-p
Most such edits to closed questions come from low rep users that don't know the consequences
Eh, plenty of 2k+ users do it too. Plus, the edit queue doesn't always make it clear the question is closed, edits may be submitted before the question was closed, and also we should be able to approve (or make ourselves) otherwise helpful edits to closed questions without this ridiculous side effect.
(I should note that, to SE's credit, it's status-planned)
08:35
@RyanM Well, closure can be swift. I think in many cases, people start the edit before the question is closed. I've done it several times. I am generally careful to not submit an edit if the question is closed in the mean time but still happens.
Yeah I'm thoroughly on team "blame the system" here :-)
I mean, some users also see a closed question and then edit it... but yeah, pushing to reopen queue is a bit eager in general.
Vandalism? stackoverflow.com/q/66577947/11573842 It looked like a code dump before so I think it should be closed as needing MCVE
@Yatin Frankly, I don't think that code was especially helpful to the question in the first place. It looks like they were responding to the comment suggesting they'd pasted way too much code.
NAA? Looks like it was copy-pasted from some discussion forum stackoverflow.com/a/66578706/11573842
@RyanM Oh ok
08:39
@RyanM yeah, without it it's "better" but only relatively. I'd vote MCVE in either case.
@Yatin main issue with vandalism is it invalidates existing answers. OP is free to change the question here I think..
@RyanM Interesting! We should expect a fix in 6 to 8 years ;p
@SurajRao Yeah but doesn't it escape being closed...?
this edit changes the close reason maybe..
Nah, there was too much code for an MCVE
08:41
Ok
@Yatin Part of it was copied from the linked page, I think it's NAA though
Also closing is to allow the user to improve the question. So editing it to escape being closed ..
it seems to be someone having a similar problem
@RyanM I think someone was quoting the official documentation in that discussion... Hence the "â–¼ QUOTE: " part. Flagged as NAA :)
09:08
Strange case of vandalizing own question
@JeanneDark Maybe the user wanted to remove the question. However, instead of just keyboard mashing, they decided to put text to avoid the automatic filters. And used some wacky generator instead of just lorem ipsum.
That's my best guess.
Sounds plausible. Thankfully, SD caught it anyway.
@mickmackusa You forgot the 20k+ tag :)
@JeanneDark Whatever was used to generate that text was...not a very good choice.
09:19
@VLAZ Maybe their next question is about improving it ;)
"How do I improve my gibberish generator to bypass SO filters?" would be an entertaining question
I suspect the version in the revision history would have fooled SD. The one in metasmoke was...rather more obvious.
Oh.
@Tomerikoo sorry, I always forget that rep condition.
Well I would suggest using the userscript. I myself only started using it lately and it's glorious
09:24
@VLAZ For best results, seed with waffles.
@Tomerikoo I am on my phone at the gym. No userscripts for chrome on mobile.
@Tomerikoo Speaking of userscripts, if you use the Unclosed Request Review Script then it automatically shows the 20k tag, among other useful features.
@mickmackusa are you dead-lifting 20K ?
Bench pressing all close-worthy questions. An extreme kind of training.
@mickmackusa That's dedication right there! (to SO that is, less to your workout...) ;p
Most SO users don't do squat.
(note: the actual idiom is "don't know squat", I'm a bit behind on English idioms it seems)
Ah well.
09:35
TIL
@E_net4couldusemoreflags Wat? I thought squat was short for diddly-squat which is just slang for "anything"
@Nick Well sure, but it appears to be more commonly used with the verb "know" rather than "do".
I mean, one's perception may differ, and I'll definitely respect that.
Well then just replace do with know. Your statement will still hold...
@Tomerikoo You can't edit comments a few minutes after they were posted.
I know... I meant... meh nevermind
09:43
It is too late! The star guides the one true path.
I beat SD ;)
10:18
@Droid edited to be in English now
10:45
I flagged this as NAA but is it possibly R/A?
jps
jps
what does R/A mean?
rude or abusive
jps
jps
ah, ok. Thanks :)
@JeanneDark "I really don't know :)" deserves a NAA flag.
Yes, I just wondered if it was worse because it looks somewhat trollish
11:10
@JeanneDark I just gave it NAA (from review) plus a wee delete vote. One more of the latter will kill it. (I was considering an R/A flag but felt that was probably going a bit too far.)
@Tomerikoo My wife, a mental health professional, does not call my fixation with Stack Overflow "dedication". At least when I'm hammering dupes while walking my dog, my dog doesn't mind.
Maybe you have a duplicitous dog? ;-)
11:52
OP post his code on github, and share the link with question
how to handle this type of [question](https://stackoverflow.com/q/66581652)
@Droid VTC no MCVE (Needs debugging details). Unclear is also correct.
I would also add Needs More Focus to the pile of close reasons and even throw in opinion based
Also, if you're wondering why the link was not rendered as a link - you have a newline in the message. When it's a multiline message, seems markup is not used.
@VLAZ it makes me too confuse. Thanks
@Tomerikoo See this suggestion, maybe?
11:58
^ I'd love to see the interface and the subsequent usage of a system where you VTC with checkboxes for all close reasons and when reopening you'd get to check which close votes are not applicable any more.
@AdrianMole In your model, does the size of each layer represent the amount of close votes necessary to close that layer?
@Tomerikoo Not my model. The 'designer' was a guy called Dante Alighieri and the illustrator was Botticelli.
What's their reputation? ;)
@JeanneDark Not very much, it seems. ;-P
12:05
They can't even post on MSO ;)
@JeanneDark But the guy who (allegedly) lives at the bottom of the pile has more points.
There really are some bizarre usernames on this site!
They were all active ages ago ;)
@AdrianMole And 7 bronze? Underpaid.
Where did all their silver badges go?
All 30?
12:12
Inflation
At least now I know what a hellban is
Interesting statistic: i.sstatic.net/YM8Ny.png
Is this just recommendation or spam?
I'm pretty sure I used to have 20 LQ reviews daily and suddenly it is 40. Is this rep-dependent?
@Tomerikoo No, depends on the number of posts in the queue
Interesting. I couldn't find anything in the help center regarding this
12:35
@Tomerikoo I think if there is more than 100 items in the queue then all users can exceed the limit by 20 more reviews
@JeanneDark I also wondered this but ended up not flagging it. It's a really bad attempt at spam, if it is. Seems more misguided than spammy.
Yeah, let's assume good faith. It has been closed in the meantime
@JeanneDark Thank you
I noticed it back when I was reviewing, especially in FP. i reached 20 and had to stop but I could come back later and review sometimes until I hit 40 reviews per day.
13:55
Why can we delete accepted answer but its author can't?
@Dharman Not really sure, but I think it might be related to abuse. If an OP self answers and accepts, that would make their answer immune to being removed for non spam/RA purposes without resorting to a mod flag. Allowing 20K+ers to delete them allows for a greater number of people to be able to manage that. If anything, they should just let 20K+ers also be able to self delete. You should know what your doing by then.
I was thining why can't the author delete accepted answer themselves
well, it was accepted, so it must be the solution the OP needs, what if they need to go back to it later?
I wouldn't trust OP. They don't know what's right or not
I just saw the author of this answer stackoverflow.com/a/15968205/1839439 point to my answer. I assume they would delete the answer if they could, but instead they are forced to suffer eternal downvotes
@Dharman I find that OP asks too many questions. All of them, in fact. Ban OP!
14:05
Yeah. Never really understood why the OP can lock out answer deletion. I would just like them to remove that, but allow OP's to see deleted content only on their posts.
@Dharman This was already suggested and declined, although Jeff gave no reason.
@Dharman Yeah, if OP knew, it wouldn't ask.
@Dharman It's also a bulwark against the ask-and-delete model. If you accept an answer, there's no good reason to delete the question later
I have one user right now who is livid we won't delete their classwork question. "But people can use it to cheat!" Uhm... maybe think of that before posting?
@Machavity Or rather "people other than me can use it to cheat!" ;)
@Machavity But it's not really that helpful, is it? The OP can unaccept it any time and possibly delete their question together with the answer. But the author of the accepted answer can't get rid of it.
Yeah, that's a much greyer area to be sure
14:40
@JeanneDark I don't think OP can delete if the answer is upvoted.
Or was it positively scored?
@VLAZ Yes, that's why I wrote "possibly". I didn't want to go into the upvote/score details.
Well, there are restrictions. But assuming it's outside these restrictions, it's indeed a bit unfair.
However, it's interesting to look at it from another perspective - you're a question asker. You ask a question (duh). You get an answer and it does help you. Maybe a year later, you come up against the same problem and go check on the answer which...is gone?
If deletion of accepted answers was allowed, you'd end up in this situation.
It's upvotes, not score. See this answer.
On occasion I've deleted a few accepted answers on request. But that's because the accepted answers were being battered by downvotes while another answer soared
Or if the accepted answer is not an answer
14:44
There is no real good way to make the policy - there are arguments against either allowing accepted answers to be deleted or for it.
In most cases the accepted answer is actually an answer. Most accepted NAAs are of the link-only variety. I'm talking where the FGITW answer got accepted but it's wrong, while a later answer is correct
In that case, the poster is stuck with their wrong answer drawing downvotes
I'm in a meeting this morning (no, my name's not gunr...) and I noticed something familiar on one of the slides being presented
12
@TylerH The flowers on the table are watching you...
:-P
15:00
@TylerH It can be Valve time too.
So, how many different things are wrong with this 'answer'. Is it asking for upvotes here, or on the linked portal? The link gives "access denied" BTW (requires a login, I assume). Answers on a postcard, please.
... would NAA be appropriate?
@AdrianMole Oh....yeah. Syncfusion. We use their components at work. You need an account in order to access their ticket system. And you also need to be approved to post tickets.
@AdrianMole Fixed
🪓
@Dharman That was a very minor and subtle edit!
15:11
I don't know what to think of this question. Is it off-topic?
@Tomerikoo the one you voted to close as off-topic? :-P
@TylerH ^_^ whoops. I started doubting after I voted...
Vote first ... ask questions later ;)
6
that is a good strategy
Or wait for a complaint on Meta
There can never be enough drama on Meta
15:22
@Tomerikoo That doesn't really seem to be POB. I've edited it slightly, is it ok now?
@cigien meh... I guess. Retracted...
Thanks
Request binned, but per @cigien's edit, that changes what OP asked, and it's still not certainly clear... so I left a comment asking for clarification.
15:29
this is an answer?
@TylerH Yeah, it's not entirely clear what metric the OP means by "better". It's unfortunate that they added an attempt at all, as it would be a perfectly reasonable "how to" question without the attempt. OTOH, without the attempt it would probably have been closed for "Lack of effort" already. It's tricky to know how to handle those situations :(
@cigien Just close and wait for the OP to edit the question into shape
@Droid More of a comment. I converted it. Not sure I would NAA flag it, tho. It might survive
@Machavity thank you.
@JeanneDark I can't say I agree with that approach in this case. Veteran curators can't agree on what editing that question into shape would look like; I'm not optimistic that the OP would be able to do that. The question is liable to just stay closed, which seems unnecessary for a reasonable (IMO) question.
15:45
@cigien well if they didn't include an attempt then they'd likely incur much more downvoting for lack of effort
I think it's good they did; they just need to be clear about what the want
@cigien For someone other than the Op editing the question into shape is not always possible (in this case what does "better" or "simpler" mean?). And if it's a problem that's encountered more often, wait for someone else to ask a (better/simpler) question about it.
@TylerH Yeah, I don't really know how to reconcile that; on-topic questions that invite downvotes are a tricky thing to handle. I agree that simpler/better is subjective, but it's kind of "I know it when I see it". The functionality asked for is fairly narrowly scoped, and both the currently provided answers satisfy my criteria of better/simpler. I'm not entirely sure how one would be more specific about what's better/simpler, in fact. cc @JeanneDark
16:04
So, what's the recommended approach to a brand-new user posting the same (identical) answer to four different questions? Mod-flag? Comment? Upvote all of them? (I'm assuming the system will spot the pattern, but only if they are perfectly identical.)
... I've encountered at least three in the Late Answers review but it took me until the third to realize what's going on.
Mod flag on one and link the whole series... I usually also state which is the first one chronologically that should stay
@Tomerikoo I did that. Advice may be better coming from a moderator.
Sorry I don't own no diamonds :(
16:29
@AdrianMole There's an auto-flag for indentical, but feel free to mod flag as well
@Machavity It would be interesting to see how many other reviewers spot them. (The answer looks OK, in and of itself.)
17:01
@AdrianMole They can't because they're unregistered
@JeanneDark Error 000: Cannot register a NULL user?
17:43
This is not a NAA?
@Droid Did the question asks where is the documentation?
@Braiam nope
and the answer on the same question stackoverflow.com/a/66587776/480982 should be a comment
@Braiam Is the question relevant though? I thought NAAs were supposed to be evaluated independent of the question.
@cigien That's tricky, see a mod answer: "Please don't flag answers to requests for a library. The answer clearly answered the question, it was the question that was the problem."
17:58
@ThomasWeller You need to raise a flag for that (NAA seems appropriate here). It's not something regular users can handle.
@NathanOliver morning
@JeanneDark Ouch. I seem to remember a mod saying that they declined a NAA flag because it required looking at the question to tell that the answer was NAA, which they don't necessarily do. Maybe I'm misremembering that.
@cigien Read Shog's castle answer: "There's really only one valid exception to this rule, and that's when the question is: Suggest me some tutorials where i can learn quick."
Maybe depends on the mod. But in case of recommendation questions I'm more careful.
18:02
If the question asks for bad answers, the problem is the question, not the answers.
@cigien No, they do that, but not because they need not.
Hmm, so I guess we need to look at the question to decide if the answer is NAA, but should only raise a NAA flag if that can be determined without looking at the question?
@cigien Nope.
I think Cody even said that they had discussions where he argued that they should if they need to.
Anyways context is awesome to do a sensible review, and refusing to look at context is very counterintuitive.
Is that SD report spam?
@Braiam So, we can assume that mods do look at the questions when evaluating NAAs? They must be doing that then, since they can't really know if they need to look at the question until they do.
@JeanneDark Assuming you're referring to this report, then yes, it's a spam campaign.
schrodingray
18:10
Thanks. already nuked
@Braiam Well, there's the reasonable argument that it would take considerably longer to handle NAA flags if they were looking at the question every time. Anyway, my confusion is arising from my recollection of a mod saying they don't necessarily look at questions when handling NAAs. I'll see if I can find that in the transcript; if I can't then I'm probably wrong, and it's moot.
@cigien "Not necessarily" doesn't mean they never look at them. And it may depend on the mod, the mod's mood etc.
@JeanneDark True, I just figured "not necessarily" implies that we should generally assume they don't look at the questions. For the second part, yeah, that wouldn't surprise me ;) Ok, thanks (@Braiam as well)
And right now we get to see a question with an accepted link-only answer ;)
@cigien Lets just put it this way: moderators on SE find SO views on NAA flags plainly bizarre.
Personally I prefer that SO moderators equalized their views with the rest of SE so I don't have unnecessarily declined flags.
18:23
They have much less traffic though
BTW, I don't decide whenever to flag if I believe it would be declined or not, but because I believe it should be flagged.
@Braiam I was not aware of that. Is there a conversation about this (on some Meta, or a chatroom, or something) that you could share a link to? I'd appreciate that; I find NAAs a little confusing, and reading that discussion might help.
Or confuse me even more, but still... :p
I find VLQ confusing, but NAAs not at all
@cigien My interpretation of that advice is that one needs to provide context in the flag that may be missed if the moderator looks quickly, though the moderator may figure it out on their own.
@RyanM Yeah, that's reasonable. OTOH, I could see a custom flag getting declined on the grounds that I should have used a standard flag instead. It's tricky (for me at least) to figure out when something may, or may not, be obvious to a mod. I've definitely run into that before (in the context of a spam flag, but it's the same issue).
18:38
@cigien A rule of thumb might be when you have to look at something else than the post itself (eg. other answers, a link, another question etc.)
@cigien Very old
Also above comments of the same user
Gilles is/was a moderator on several sites.
@cigien I detest that users should worry about that.
18:53
@cigien I usually write "subtle NAA" or similar as an effort to avoid that possibility if it's borderline whether or not it's obvious
@Braiam Thank you, that was very helpful. I'd read that Q&A before, but I think it was before I'd started raising flags, and so a lot of that conversation makes a lot more sense now. As to being confused, I can't say that it's helped a lot. Frankly, I'm bewildered how @JeanneDark finds NAAs so easy :)
@cigien If you optimize for not declined flags, you can basically do it algorithmically. But if you do that, why don't we just put said algo in the answer validation route :D
@Braiam Well, I guess it's easier for mods to handle standard flags (because they appear in the same queue, etc), and they have quite a lot to do.
@cigien If I were a mod, I just act on those that it is obvious that I could act upon. I wouldn't decline those that aren't obvious ;)
18:58
Which is what users expect.
@Braiam Well sure, but someone needs to handle those eventually.
@Braiam No, that's not what I'm trying to do really. Apart from red flags, I don't particularly mind getting them wrong; I just like to know why they're wrong :)
@RyanM Ha, that's an interesting approach. I'll make sure to try that out soon :)
@cigien If the why is because the moderator, contrary to every documentation on the site, refuses to look at context to do a sensible review, what would you do?
Personally, I would try to get moderators that do try to review my flag sensibly.
There's nothing I would do per se, but at least I would know why I got a declined flag. And I don't really know how many flags mods go through regularly, so I can't speak to whether looking at all the context is a sensible thing to do, or not. if I had to choose between clearing all the flags at the cost of confusing some curators vs having a large backlog of unhandled flags, I think I'd choose the former.
19:27
@cigien If the rate of handling flags is consistently lower than the rate that the flags are raised, then there will be an ever expanding backlog of unhandled flags.
@Braiam Having moderators perform a full investigation on every single flag, which is basically what is being argued for (for what's being argued, it would be necessary to extensively investigate nearly every flag). That would increase the amount of time necessary for handling what are apparently simple flags (the substantial majority of flags) by a factor of somewhere between 10 and 100.
That would mean we'd need between 10 to 100 times the current number of active moderators, and substantial improvements to the moderator tooling in order to better prevent duplicated work (which is already a problem).
So, yes, in order to make handling the thousands of flags which are raised on SO, the moderators do need for the named flags to be used in situations which are clear and obvious, so that handling the ones which are clear and obvious can take very little time.
If the situation isn't obvious, then raise a custom flag and explain. You've already done enough investigation to determine that you think something isn't right. Don't force moderators to repeat that investigation, and have to investigate any other possible things which might make someone raise an unexplained flag.
20:09
@Makyen I think just having mods open the flagged item in a new window so they can review it in context would be enough
at least for starters
or click it and let it pop open a modal/iframe of said context that you could scroll quickly
that way for obvious stuff like spam or flaming/trolling you wouldn't need to do anything extra, but for stuff that doesn't immediately register as "oh yeah I see this and agree", there'd be very little friction between you and the next step
@Braiam Right, by "having" I mean "my desire is for"
e.g. I think mods should do that for any non-immediately obvious flagged item
@TylerH Oh, that's what I say. Moderators seems to be defensive about that.
If it's not obvious why someone flags an answer as NAA... why not research for a bit, or skip if they don't have time :D
Moderators shouldn't feel responsible to handle every flag in front of them if they aren't willing to do due diligence.
And to the point of 'we'd need lots more mods' OK... onboard some :-) We have elections very seldomly and never recruit more than 1 or 2 mods at a time. If there's concern about doing that and then having no good candidates, reach out behind the scenes to a bunch of potential users the mod team thinks would make good mods and ask them to run again this time
I get we can't bring on 10 new mods at once because onboarding is taxing but... we could maybe bring on 3 or 4. Or we could restrict candidates to certain timezones or other novel criteria
20:34
@TylerH There's another less "throwing more meat at the problem" solution: there's a delete queue and mods don't handle NAA/VLQ flags unless the queue can't delete it.
how would that work for comments
that's where most of my flags on SO go these days
One problem at the time Watson :D
heh
I'm trying out this TDD thing for a new project... I feel so weird.
How about self-replicating mod-bots?
20:48
Without link, its not NAA?
@AdrianMole That feels like cheating.
21:01
Well, the bots could start a spree of mutually suspending each other, for breaking the rules.
@TylerH While we may or may not need more mods, overall I think you're trying to optimize for the wrong thing.
You're trying to get to the point of whatever moderator is handling the flag figuring out whatever it was the user was trying to communicate was the problem by raising the flag. You're trying to get to the point of having no declined flags when the actual situation was one where a flag was appropriate and no "helpful" flags when the situation didn't warrant the flag.
However, you're trying to get there by making the moderator (regardless of how many) expend more time on every flag in an effort to guess at what the user was seeing and their real reason for raising the flag.
That's not a good way to optimize. Within reason, regardless of how many moderators there are, there's always going to be other things the moderators could be doing with that time, even if that's doing nothing and just reducing the overall amount of time that moderators need to spend on the site.
Primarily the issue seems to be that people don't like to see that their flag was declined, but really so what if a flag is declined. Unless the user is raising a significant number of flags and they are getting a high percentage of those flags declined, there's really no impact to the user from a declined flag, other than that they may need to raise a custom flag and explain the issue (which they should have explained to begin with).
Ultimately, raising a flag is about communication: communicating between a user that saw something which they feel needs moderator attention and the moderator understanding what the user was trying to communicate. If what is meant by the named flags isn't very tightly defined, then you are always relying on the moderator to guess at what the user is attempting to communicate. Anytime you force there to be guessing in communication between humans, there will be errors.
So, this would not be a good reason: I'm flagging this post because it needs moderator attention.
21:16
@AdrianMole Ahhh... no, not really. :)
Hehe - If only we knew which mod would handle our flag, then we could get away with some strange stuff! ;)
21:36
@Makyen No I'm not trying to get to no declined flags, I'm trying to get to moderators handling flags more accurately :-)
Also I don't think "guess" is the right word. The point of looking more closely / at more context is so that the decision the moderator makes is less of a guess.
It's true that's typically a situation where a flag is declined rather than a flag is marked helpful, but the issue I have is not that I now have a 'declined flag +1', but that the content did not get removed/handled.
And sure, if a flag gets declined I could re-flag as a mod flag and provide more info, but then a mod could decline and say 'use the appropriate flag for that', especially if the flag is handled by a different moderator the second time around
maybe if declinations showed "flag declined [moderator did not click through to context]" that'd be enough for me to know whether I should cause a ruckus on Meta about it
or "flag declined [moderator clicked through to context]"
I'd be happy to provide commentary on all flag types to assist the moderator in making a determination, if only that option were available
22:09
@TylerH Can you move this to /dev/null?
@ChristopherMoore binned per your request
22:49
@Steve If it's not an answer, you can just flag it as NAA. Delete votes are more for poor quality answers (e.g. that are wrong) that regular users need to delete.
...been a while since I copped a whipping like this. imgur.com/a/uRMJJCq I wonder what I did. :) Wonder if it was chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/51757572#51757572 or something else.
@cigien Already flagged as NAA. It's already doomed, but just asking to look at it because that link seems exist only for attracting clicks. A fast deletion could be desirable.
Well it's gone now
@Steve Ah, I see. In case it might be spam, mentioning that is a good idea, since that gives us an opportunity to report it to SD. As it happens, this post doesn't appear to be spam to me.
@mickmackusa Ignore it. It will go away
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