It is possible to flag a post as spam.

  • What is spam?
  • What is the effect of the spam flag?
  • When should the spam flag be used?
  • Is there any way to remove spam flags?
  • How does the spam flag differ from the offensive flag?

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Related: How does the Offensive Flag work?

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Looking at the answer. I see that the first revision owner loses the rep? What happens if a bunch of people vote spam on an edit? If it's one or two votes, the OP or editor can rollback and remove the flag, but if it's 6, the original revision owner (the OP) loses rep? What if the Spam is a malicious edit. Shouldn't the flagged revision owner lose rep instead? – Lee Louviere Aug 23 '12 at 21:45
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I meant to focus that comment more on malicious editors could cause misdirected rep damage since the first revision owner gets the damage. – Lee Louviere Aug 23 '12 at 21:59
@Xaade: The scenario that you are describing is exceptionally rare, and if it does happen, moderators can reverse it. – Robert Harvey Aug 24 '12 at 15:07
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@RobertHarvey Ok, but for reference I posted an answer with my findings. Hopefully if anyone else has the question in their head, it'll clear it up. It's basically the consensus from other questions. – Lee Louviere Aug 24 '12 at 15:21

2 Answers

up vote 124 down vote accepted

What is Spam?

Spam is Unsolicited Commercial Advertisement. You've all seen it. Spam doesn't mean "I don't like the answer" or "this answer is noise."

What is the effect of the Spam flag?

This type of flag receives an extremely high priority in the moderation queue. It should be used only when the content of the post you are flagging meets the criteria defined below, or it will likely be declined.

The spam flag is designed to eliminate posts with no relevant content and to penalize the authors:

  • 3 flags (spam or offensive): post is banished from the front page.
  • 6 flags (spam or offensive): post is locked, deleted, and the first revision owner loses 100 reputation.
  • 1 flag from a moderator has the same effect as 6 flags from normal users: instant destruction.
  • Because a question with 6 flags is locked, a 10k reputation user cannot meaningfully undelete it.
  • Each spam flag counts as a downvote for calculating the post's score (it does not affect the user's reputation).

When should the Spam flag be used?

A question should be marked as spam ONLY when it contains an unsolicited advertisement.

It should NOT be marked as spam when:

  • The answer contains no useful information, such as an answer that says "I don't care about your problem". Flag an answer as 'not an answer' instead; if you find a weird non-question, then flag it 'for moderator attention' with a custom explanation.

  • It contains gibberish, such as "fsdguejgkfdlk". Again, flag an answer as 'not an answer', or flag a question 'for moderator attention' with a custom explanation.

(Source)

Is there any way to remove Spam flags?

There is often no need, as spam 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 spam flags from that particular revision. This allows the OP (or someone else with edit rights) to rollback a post that someone else made spam in a later revision. However, as a general user, once you mark a post as spam, you cannot take it back.

How does the Spam flag differ from the Offensive flag?

There is no functional difference aside from separate counts - 3/6 of either will be sufficient for mechanical purposes. Mods can see which flags are applied, and Jeff's plan according to a comment on a blog post was that in the future posts that are highlighted as spam might be used to help construct better measures to protect against spam.

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For reference:

What about malicious edits?

Problem

At 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.

Explanation

The reasoning is in how edits can occur.

  • If an edit is by the first revision owner, the content is their responsibility.
  • If an edit is by a low rep member, the edit must be approved.
  • If an edit is by a high rep member, they have some trust with the community and likely shouldn't behave in this way.

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 scenarios

It 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

  • Be careful when you assign flags. If you see an edit, check the revision history and rollback if the previous revision is not offensive.
  • Be careful when you approve edits. Ensure there's no offensive material, new or not. If there is, take the opportunity to improve the edit and remove the offensive material entirely.
  • Be careful when you edit. Ensure that you've removed the offensive material.

If these suggestions are followed, we can avoid misdirected punishment and save correction efforts by moderation.

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protected by Won't Jun 13 '11 at 16:28

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