It is possible to flag a post as Offensive.
- What is the effect of the Offensive flag?
- When should the Offensive flag be used?
- Is there any way to remove Offensive flags?
Related: How does the Spam Flag work?
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It is possible to flag a post as Offensive.
Related: How does the Spam Flag work? |
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What is the effect of the Offensive flag?The offensive flag is designed to eliminate truly offensive posts and to penalize the authors:
When should the Offensive flag be used?Even if a post is a bad post for some reason or other, it is probably not offensive. The Offensive flag is meant to be used only in extreme cases, like hate speech, or abuse. For example, if a user posts obscene images to the site, that should be flagged as offensive. But if someone says something bad about your favorite technology, that probably doesn't apply. As a rule of thumb, if you can't justify something as being hate speech, or abuse, you shouldn't mark the post as offensive. Instead, you should down-vote the post. When you decide to flag a post Offensive, you will get a warning dialog. Take this time to decide if the post is really offensive. Is there any way to remove Offensive flags?There is often no need, as offensive flags expire after 48 hours if the thresholds aren't reached. Rolling back a post to a previous state will revert to the number of offensive flags from that particular revision. This allows the OP (or someone else with edit rights) to rollback a post that someone else made offensive in a later revision. However as a general user, once you mark a post as offensive, you cannot take it back. |
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I see a couple loopholes:
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If I understand correctly, if I mark an answer offensive and the person whose answer it is doesn't agree, that user (or anyone else with enough rep) can remove that offensive tag, but I can't. Does that make sense? If I downvote a question, nobody can remove that downvote except me, and even I can't after a long enough period of time. So why should someone else be able to remove my offensive tag? Edited to add a clarification. After a brief email conversation with (someone?) at team@stackoverflow.com, I can now say that my concern is unfounded. You can roll back revisions of questions or answers, but adding an offensive flag is not a revision. So if someone posts a question that is offensive and I mark it as such, the poster cannot roll back the question to get rid of my offensive flag, since the question is still at revision 1 so there's nothing to roll back to. If someone posts a valid question and someone else modifies it to be offensive, then the original poster can roll it back to his revision, thereby removing both the offensive content and any offensive tags. There is still the potential for abuse -- someone could post an offensive question and then quickly post a small revision to it. If he did that before the original revision was marked as offensive, then he'd always be able to roll back to revision 1, thereby removing any offensive tags. But I think the likelihood of this is low. If it gets to be a problem, Jeff and the boys can revisit it. |
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You are facing a difficult problem here: your post about "what is offensive" makes it clear the matter is subjective and that one must avoid applying the tag lightly because the consequences are fairly severe. That being the case, it is guaranteed that there will be times when the flag is inappropriately used. Yet you lack a process for handling those cases, and this is going to hurt the community. I had a question marked offensive when there was nothing offensive about it. By the very criteria I just read above, it should not have happened. If I am going to care about reputation and work on building it, then I should have a process whereby I can state the case for my defense when 100 rep is taken from me. What process is there for that to happen? BTW, here's the question that was deemed offensive (as best I can remember ... it was blown away within 2 minutes). (Note: Granted, it is not the most value-adding question in the world. I was feeling goofy, and the metaphor of a "virtual beggar" crossed my mind. Plus, I think I partly misunderstood the meaning of the "community wiki" flag. So delete it ... but how does it justify the "offensive" flag?) Subject: Will you please vote me up? I have a disease. (Imagine me as a beggar on the sidewalk). Post Text Ha ha, just kidding (which is why I marked it "community wiki"). And let me emphasize: it was marked as "community wiki" from the outset. There is no way I could have garnered any rep from it. |
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For reference: What about malecious edits?ProblemAt first this appears to be potentially a bad mechanic. An offensive edit would cause the OP to get punished with automatic rep loss. If the community isn't paying attention they could flag spam and cause unwarranted damage to the first revision owner. There are ways to counter this. Before it reaches 6 flags, an editor could revert the edit and the flags would be revoked. However, if the 6 flags occur fast, or a mod flags, there's no chance to intervene. ExplanationThe reasoning is in how edits can occur.
Any outliers to the above can be corrected and revoked by moderation. Why not assign flags to the current revision owner?Going with the above understanding, an editor is trusted. Likely they are trying to improve the post. So if they fail to completely improve the post and leave behind overlooked offensive material. They would incur the penalty in the suggested alternative system. Possible real scenariosIt is still likely for offensive material to get placed in an edit. Considering the poor performance of reviewers quickly approving edits. It is possible that a malicious edit carefully hidden from first glance can be unintentionally approved. Resulting in the above problem. Solution
If these suggestions are followed, we can avoid misdirected punishment and save correction efforts by moderation. |
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