23:56
@mickmackusa Since you brought it up and asked people to weigh in on the evaluation of your flag, I'll quote the flag text here, as we would if you brought it up on Meta. You flagged
this answer. Your flag said:
The text, even just the code, in the two answers is significantly different. The answers are not even close to being an "exact duplicate" (i.e. not something where the text can be naively compared wrt. being "exact"). Your wording of "exact duplicate" sets this up for being declined. "Exact duplicate" means that it's exactly a duplicate (as in, someone did a copy & paste). It doesn't mean, "look at this with the eye of someone who understands this technology and evaluate if they are the same".
There isn't even a hint in your flag that it takes technical expertise to evaluate that the answers are effectively the same. I agree with the moderator who declined this flag. I would do so.
That doesn't mean the answer shouldn't be deleted, just that the flag indicates they are exact duplicates, which they definitely aren't.
Given that the text in the answer is not visually identical, what you're really wanting is a moderator to make a call that the answers are effectively the same from a technical POV. In other words, you're asking for your flag to be evaluated by a SME, which means that it's not really appropriate for a flag, because flags are not guaranteed to be (or even likely to be) handled by a SME in the technology which is involved in the particular post you are flagging.
2
At an absolute minimum, you need to be explicit in your flag that the post must be evaluated by a moderator who is an SME. That might happen, but it's quite unlikely, particularly if you don't make that clear in your flag. Moderators generally try to respond reasonably to flags, but without being clear in your flag text as to what's necessary in order to evaluate it, there's not much we can/will do.
Yeah, sure, we could try passing every single flag off to someone who might know more about the tech, but that just can not scale to the thousands of flags which are raised on SO every day. [Not to mention that moderators just can't cover every technology.]
You, the person flagging, must be the first pass at sorting flags into categories for us to deal with: named flags either are, or are not, exactly what's named in the flag. Posts flagged with a named flag need to be easily identifiable as that type of thing just on the face of the text in the post. If it's not, then the flag has a good chance of being declined. Basically, all such valid named flags should also be: "this needs to be deleted".
If it's more complex or needs a more nuanced response, then raise a custom flag. Be explicit and clear. If it needs some specialized knowledge to evaluate, then think about if it's really appropriate for a moderator or 10k+/20k+ users. If it's really appropriate for a moderator, then be clear in your flag: state the problem; state the solution you think needs to happen; state anything that needs to be known/understood in order to evaluate (e.g. that it requires being an SME in technology X).
Back on that specific answer: that post is low scored and within being handled by 20k+ users, particularly now after 2 downvotes today.