@SyedM.Sannan reopening just to reclose is also futile, just living with the wrong close reason is the only sustainable approach given how many users need to coordinate to pull off a successful reopen + reclose
@Cow in theory you could mod flag if you are certain, but the normal approach would be to just close it and leave it to the OP to figure out if it makes sense to repost there
Plus it is robotics season, so I don't have a lot of free time to moderate for the next few weeks. I was away at a competition over the weekend and will be again next weekend. Then there is a four day competition coming up a week and half after that.
With another 20 moderators, we might be able to keep up with the flags.
My other volunteer time commitment is as a software and strategy mentor for my high schools robotics team. I'm there 5 days a week from January until April. I build and run their scouting system. chiefdelphi.com/t/viper-scouting-app-2024/448739 As far a real life goes it is almost as surreal as SO.
tags are also less immediately visible, so it would be easy (and common) for people to introduce spam or other bad contentwithout sufficient reputation
if you upload an image here it gets an i.stack.imgur.com URL which doesn't appear to force me to accept more cookies than I already accepted for Stack Overflow itself
there's an "upload ..." button next to the "send" box here in chat, though it's kind of cumbersome to use if you want to avoid a onebox
@tripleee I forget which user script it is but I have one that turns pressing the up arrow into edit last message which makes it convenient to add a ! to the end to stop the one boxing
@jps No, I don't think any of them are in this room. But Dalija is in SOCVR, I think M-- shows up as well. Abdul can be found in the Meta room. If you really need to reah out.
@AndreasmovedtoCodidact Ah so volunteers... I don't envy them. I just wished to know if there was even a point in flagging crap there, or if all flags goes to some rank & file devs at SO-the-company.
It feels like one of them features that will never take off. To be successful, it should be more tightly coupled to the main Q&A I think. Like, have a discussions tab behind each Q&A where technical as well as meta stuff can be discussed.
"What's the most difficult/frustrating part of the life of a programmer?" Hmm well we had a power outage at work earlier today so I couldn't get more coffee.
We have what seems like a half power-cut, at the moment. The LED lights come on (and still won't go out) but the fluorescent ones won't fire up. And the fans are working but only spinning ~half speed. But I think I can make coffee.
I flag this answer as NAA (duplicate of existing answer ~5 yrs before, with an existing comment explaining this). My flag is declined by a mod, and the question is then deleted by a mod. What gives?
@desertnaut it is an answer, so NAA is not appropriate. Down vote and delete votes are the way to go there. Also just blowing away the whole Q&A also works
you might be able to argue for a VLQ flag but that is more meant for gibberish, not an unhelpful late duplicate answer.
@Machavity so, is a NAA flag appropriate here or is it not? I get a bunch of similar cases in the NAA review queue (we all do, I guess); if the NAA flag (that put them in the queue in the first place) is not appropriate, why am I supposed to vote for deleting them there?
@desertnaut The catch on NAA is we get TONS of those flags, and we tend to judge them based on if they merely look like an answer. We got lots of folks who are like "This answer is wrong. NAA flag!"
If an answer is a late retread, feel free to custom flag it as that. We do delete those
So that it does not even go to the review queue???
I am seriously confused... so, when we (reviewers) meet such NAAs in the review queue (presumably as a result of someone flagging them as such), we are supposed to vote for deletion, while when mods meet them as a result of the same flag, they are supposed to decline the flag and keep them? @Machavity
and the response to the fact that mods get "TONS" of such NAA flags is to raise custom flags instead?
That is an answer. Full stop. I would have declined it myself. The real problem there is that the question is 5 years old and there were three other answers that already explained it was a typo
@desertnaut But... it's still an answer. And the mod console (for better or worse) doesn't show comments
@Machavity so consequently, when I meet such cases in the review queue (duplicates, but answers indeed, as you correctly say), I should not vote to delete them, right?
and I am doing something seriously wrong if I do (vote to delete them) as part of my review...
There's a bit of a grey area there. For moderators, we have our own console. But I have zero problems with you 20k voting to delete those. Heck, ask the room to help join in.
Is delete voting in queue going to get you review banned? Probably not. I've never done that, and I don't think (even in brighter days) the mod crew ever had that much time
And the review queue does show comments, which makes that easier
the question is not if I need help (from the room or elsewhere) or if something can get me banned (so I should be careful) or not (so I can afford to be careless!)... the question is what is the rule here?
"And the mod console (for better or worse) doesn't show comments" - this explains a lot, but still...
The rule is "Not An Answer" flags are for answers that are not trying to answer the question
Most of the ones we get are folks with "Me too" answers, wanting to thank another answer, or folks who want to ask a similar but distinct question. That's why the flag exists.
@Machavity up to there the situation seems to be clear; but I am asking about the review process here (the "grey area" as you say)
rigidly speaking, if I meet such dup answers in the queue, I should not vote for deletion! I should vote "looks OK"! Am I right, according to the rules?
If you find one in review, and it's something you would 20k delete anyways, I have no problem just voting to delete. Once in a while I run across one where I view the post and figure out it wasn't NAA and just delete for convenience. I'm sure the other mods do the same (the console makes deletion really convenient)
I'm just saying that if you flag it, you shouldn't rely on that. It's more likely to be declined than not if you need some context that's not present in the post itself
Ideally? Select "Looks OK" and then downvote and/or 20k delete. But I'm not going to ding folks for just letting the NAA delete do the same thing with fewer steps
If I thought the "disputed" result would have any impact on the flagger, I might be inclined to enforce it in some fashion, but the flagger is unlikely to ever see it.
@KevinB Because (and this is more diamond perspective than anything) we want folks to cast good flags. NAA flags are the wrong tool here, and I'd love it if the system did a better job of educating folks when their NAAs are not validated. But it doesn't so...
Honestly, I hope desertnaut is a better flagger for this. But they're a rare breed: the flagger who cares about why a flag wasn't validated
@KevinB I am not disputing the practical aspects (according to which doing so does not make any sense indeed). I am trying to check the internal consistency of our rules.
Turns out, someone flagging a dup as NAA is doing it wrong (as @Machavity has just affirmed) and me reviewing it with a delete vote am somehow rewarding this wrong behavior
and. one step further, I am doing it myself (i.e. flagging wrongly), and when my flag is justifiably declined, I come complalining... :(
@Machavity so, correct me if I am wrong please: someone may get flag-banned only due to their flags declined by mods, right? Or also "declined" by review?
@desertnaut There's three states for post flags: helpful, disputed and declined. For NAAs, you get a disputed for reviewers disagreeing with your flags. I don't think anything bad can happen to you (at least in an automated way like review failures)
Declines can only be issued by a mod, IIRC (definitely for NAA, but sure on all flags)
Just as an FYI (on the typo question) I undeleted it and locked it. I suspect (based on the views) that particular typo is pretty common. Looks like a useful signpost at the bare minimum
I'm not so much concerned by the score, but I think the fact that it has been closed and reopened multiple times each means it should probably be closed again by Meta consensus rather than SOCVR.
including reopened once by Shog (who generally had a rather sensible viewpoint on whether something should be closed or not)