Hot answers tagged flag-weight
16
We get hundreds of flags a day on Stack Overflow, so it's certainly a lot easier on moderators if you flag things that you're almost certain need a moderator's attention. That being said, a few declined flags won't hurt you in any way, so it's probably worth it to use a couple of your flags to try and find where the border is between helpful and declined. ...
9
Don't worry about the occasional declined flag. Just learn from them. Were you wrong to flag it? Were you not clear enough? Then you'll pick up a "strategy" in no time.
Given that I don't know what you mean by "aggressive" flagging, I'm not sure I'd recommend that. Just flag anything that you think should be flagged within reason.
A couple of declined ...
8
I'm really talking about small(Chemistry) and medium(Physics) sites here, I'm unfamiliar with SO/SU so I'll exclude them.
In my opinion, one should mark a flag as helpful when one agrees with the flag, even if no action is taken. For example, if an LQ post is flagged as VLQ, but isn't deletable, I would generally mark it as "helpful", because the ...
7
It has the same effect on your flagging privilege. The flag weight and all is still there, it's just invisible. So too many declined flags will affect the sorting of your flags, and if your flag weight goes too low, your flags are never displayed in the list. Also (h/t jadarnel27), the number of flags you get per day is affected by this.
Too many people ...
5
Flags are useful because the help moderators (and high-rep users) to keep an eye on all hot spots in the site they moderate. For this reason, flagging should (and is!) encouraged whenever possible. On the other hand, signal/noise ratio should also be kept high.
I find no fault in the current standard, as I don't see any valid reason to change it.
I only ...
5
As of now, moderators are officially discouraged to decline flags without a strong reason.
Clarifications given in September 2011 Newsletter of SE Community Moderator Blog look pretty straightforward:
Flags Too Often Marked [declined]
Marking a flag [declined] was designed to deter serial abusers of the flagging system, but we find that ...
4
Another reason is just changing your mind, you find out you're wrong, or you learned something new since flagging something. For example, I flagged a post for migration just a little while ago, simply because it was Drupal and on SO. Immediately upon flagging it I started thinking, "Are we supposed to be migrating things simply because they're Drupal? Or is ...
4
Flag weight...
...is a measure of how well a user raises flags. Users with a history of flagging helpfully — as judged by moderators who act on those flags — earn high flag weight, and vice versa.
All users start with flag weight of 100. Scores can fall to as low as 0 and rise to as high as 750...
Until Jan. 20, 2012, flag weight was displayed ...
4
Don't worry about it. As long as you flag sensibly, the occasional declined flag won't hurt.
What a declined flag does:
slightly lower the priority of your future flags in the moderator queue
decrease the number of flags you have available every day
If your flagging history is completely atrocious, the worst that can possibly happen is that your flags ...
4
You start with flag weight 100. You get +10 per helpful flag, -10 per declined flag [1]. +0 for disputed flags. If you go above 500, it increases nonlinearly[2]. The higher your flag weight, the higher position you get in the flag queue (and thus your flag is reviewed faster). If it reaches 0, you can still flag, but nobody will read them.
On large sites ...
4
In addition to what has been said about your flag limit being flexible: if you are piling up flags that quickly, there is a good chance the limiting factor in the workflow is no longer how fast you can find stuff to flag, but how fast the mods can deal with your flags.
I'm going to take a guess and say you're specifically focusing on flagging activities. ...
3
As you prove yourself to be a good flagger by making good flags, your flag limit will increase. Getting one declined flag tends to decrease the number of flags that you can make by 1 however.
For more information on flagging, see this answer by Marc Gravell. It is slightly outdated however. Also, see the How many flags do I have? section on this page that ...
2
Well I do not feel it is good idea to remove such kind of limitations, the reason, Site is not only for single purpose. You should concentrate on other stuff like Editting, Answering, Reviewing.
If one has unlimited authority for one task then he/she will keep on doing it for long time which sometimes is not good.
Moreover as the Ran commented the ...
2
Flag weight used to be there but now helpful flags link is displayed on your profile which is private. This flag summary page displays your flagging history. On the left side it also shows flagging summary (sample screenshot given below).
As such there is no rate against which you can compare your flagging effectiveness. The higher the number in front of ...
2
Looks like for SO (and maybe the other two trilogy sites), they are getting stricter about the flags due to the review queue. So this answers the "for large sites" thing.
From here:
Because of the analytics in use in the review queue (and other places), we've been told to be more strict about 'accepting' flags that are off base. It used to be that a ...
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