Note, there is a similar request on MSE which is 2 years old.
Note also that the observations made here can be put in perspective of the comment flag change which is going to encapsulate lots of comment flag types into a single one, for the same reasons that will be described in this post.
This post is not about stating the current difference between the NAA and VLQ flags. Its purpose is not to make consensus on when to choose one over the other. Its purpose is to merge those two flags into one and coming up with a unifying simple process for both users and moderators.
Let me start by an overview of the current workflow for both flags.
- "Not An Answer": When this flag is raised, the post goes into the "Low Quality Posts" review queue, unless the answer is accepted. If a reviewer from that queue edits the post, the flag is automatically cleared. The flag is not cleared if the post is edited outside of the queue. If the result of the review is "Looks OK", the flag is disputed. If the result of review is "Recommend Deletion", the post is deleted and the flag is marked helpful. At any time, a moderator can review the flag and either decline it, accept it by marking the flag helpful (and generally deleting the post in the process or converting it to a comment).
- "Very Low Quality": When this flag is raised, the post goes into the "Low Quality Posts" review queue after a delay of 15 minutes, unless the answer is accepted. It is not possible to flag as VLQ a post with score > 0. Whenever the post is edited, whether it is in the queue or not, whether the editor is the flagger themselves or not, the flag is marked helpful and the post gets an automatic downvote. If the result of the review is "Looks OK", the flag is disputed. If the result of review is "Recommend Deletion", the post is deleted and the flag is marked helpful. At any time, a moderator can review the flag and either decline it or accept it by marking the flag helpful (and generally deleting the post in the process or converting it to a comment).
Those two flags have a very different usage guidance. For NAA:
This was posted as an answer, but it does not attempt to answer the question. It should possibly be an edit, a comment, another question, or deleted altogether.
whereas for VLQ:
This answer has severe formatting or content problems. This answer is unlikely to be salvageable through editing, and might need to be removed.
Putting into perspective the usage guidance of the flags and the difference in their workflow, something is clearly wrong. Those two flags are intended to be used differently depending of the content of the answer, but they are handled exactly the same way, have practically the same workflow and both have the same meaning:
I think this answer should be deleted (either converted to a comment or removed altogether).
The result is more often than not a confusion over which flag to choose: Am I misusing the “Very Low Quality” flag? — The Very Low Quality flag is broken — Making sure the “Not an answer” flag is used for non-answers — Difference between 'very low quality' and 'not an answer' flags. The result of the confusion is always the same: a pedantic red-circle emphasizing specific words out of the context of the flag description that ought to explain why you did something wrong. It's even worse if you consider link-only answers: Should link-only answers be flagged as not-an-answer? Conflicting meta posts — Can we get some consensus on what flag to use for link only answers?
Therefore, to simplify this, I suggest merging those two flags into a single one. Those would be the clear advantages:
- Single clear point of entry for users to flag an answer with serious issues and not meeting the quality criteria and Q/A format required by Stack Overflow.
- Single flag for moderators to handle, thereby easying their filtering and flag handling processes.
This would be the workflow of the proposed flag:
- Flag can be raised
whatever the score of the answerif the answer has a score ≤ 0 (as per Shog9's comment). Currently, this is the case for VLQ but not for NAA; - The answer goes into the "Low Quality Posts" queue, unless it is accepted, where it follows exactly the same process as today (if accepted, it goes directly into the moderator queue). 4 "Recommend Deletion" actions or 3 "Delete" votes by users with 20k+ reputation will delete the answer if its score is ≤ 0 and will raise a system flag if its score is > 0, just like today.
- An edit made by the OP or by someone from the queue would mark the flag helpful. This would stop the current loop-hole and potential abuse where someone can flag as VLQ and immediately edit, thereby marking the flag helpful. Also, the current VLQ flag description says the post "is unlikely to be salvageable through editing", but the flag is marked helpful when the post is edited, meaning that if the post was editable to a useful state then the flag was wrong.
- A system flag would be raised if the result of the review in the "Low Quality Posts" queue is disputed, just like today for both flags.
- Moderators would still be able to handle the flag at any time, just like they do now (deleting, converting to comment, declining).
The name of the new flag is up for discussion, but it should convey the intent that what is being flagged is intended for deletion.