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23

If I had to wager a guess, those posts are likely being flagged because they are normally just noise, or "inane banter" as you suggested. Not that it's wrong for the poster to want to understand what's wrong with their post so they can improve it, but the "Why was I down voted" comment will almost never help with that. Given that the comment has no way of ...


22

My comments on my own question, when responding to a downvoter, were repeatedly deleted without anyone flagging them. How could this be, and who has the power to do so? Moderators do. Moderators, unlike yourself, can also see when someone has flagged a comment. So for instance, I can determine that you've had 10 offensive comment flags on that question ...


22

No, why would it? The obsolete comment will disappear (if other users flag it or a moderator agrees with your flag), and that's about it. The only comment flag that may "hurt" the user is the "rude or offensive" one, depending on the circumstances it might lead to a suspension. But "obsolete" is absolutely harmless.


21

That's exactly what the obsolete flag is for. Flag away! Comments are, by their very nature, transitional. Flagging helps keep them under control and tidied up. Note that if a comment has been flagged multiple times, it'll be auto-removed, so you are not overly burdening the janitoCTRL+Wmoderators when flagging comments, provided we all do our bit.


20

If you see a comment that's just noise then flag it for moderator attention. There is a fine line here. The comment: +1 for mentioning this particular aspect may be useful - it draws attention to the particular part of the answer that's the most relevant. However, I agree that most of these are probably just noise (and I've probably been guilty of ...


20

I flag them on sight. IMHO, they are noise at best, and potentially harmful at worst. I've seen instances where a user will write an incorrect, unhelpful, or redundant answer and whine about being down-voted while I'm writing a comment to explain the problem. But worse by far are the answers where someone's already bothered to point out a problem or ask ...


19

I think those should be flagged with prejudice. If the answer is on Stack Overflow already, then mark as duplicate. If you Google something and SO isn't the #1 hit, then it should be asked! That way, next week, SO is #1. Don't get me wrong, I also find horribly simple questions annoying - but at least they can only be asked once. "How do I increment ...


18

No. Right now the freedom is on a commenter to post an answer as a comment, they may have legitimate reasons for doing it: Don't want reputation Are afraid their answer may not be totally correct If their comment is answer worthy, then the sheer number of 'upvotes' it gets will be the best encouragement to post it as an answer. It boils down to who is ...


17

Your first comment: Have you searched something? His reply: I'm looking for ... I found something. Your reply: Better if you first try something, and then ask if you find problems in your attempt of doing it. His reply: Ho trovato qualcosa che fa uso di rettangoli ma niente che faccia uso di un poligono irregolare... il tuo commento è ...


17

I would not flag them unless there becomes a lot of them and they start to overshadow other more important comments In most cases, they aren't doing any harm by being there Upvotes can have multiple meanings, and as Oded said, they're an additional indication that the answer was helpful, and not just upvoted based on some other meaning. I have seen ...


15

What if you just ignore them? I mean, one flag doesn't really do much on its own, right? I can understand you may be concerned that, by knowing who is flagging the item, we would take sides with or against that person. No, I'm concerned that you'd discourage them from flagging and they'd instead step up their arguing: If someone continually flagged ...


15

You can flag it as offensive if you want. Alternatively, just ignore it. It's just a really dumb comment. A general word of advice though: While it's perfectly within your right to downvote answers to your own questions, I would be very careful with it - after all, the answerer donated some time to help you. A downvote from the OP themselves is often ...


14

Your comment was: I'm removing my answer. I don't feel comfortable with giving "answers" to interview questions It was deleted by a diamond moderator. The flagging history doesn't indicate specifically which comments were flagged, or by whom. Comments are for clarification of a post, or asking for clarification. Any other use subjects them to ...


14

Comments cannot be resurrected or undeleted. Think of them as the bill posters slathered across building sites for upcoming gigs. There to impart small nuggets of whatever glue gum pasting they need to and gone the next week. But don't think of them as sacrosanct, needing to stick around for all of wikidumpenternity. A useful comment better serves the ...


14

I don't see @downvoter comments as being so pervasive, or so disruptive, that we need insta-nuke abilities for them. If a particular comment is being disruptive it can be flagged and/or ignored and a mod can nuke it eventually. This is in contrast to say, "why u haz 0% accept rate?!" comments that were getting completely out of hand in terms of volume, and ...


14

Well, to start with, you could have moved the comments to the question body. Moderators do have lots to do on a site as busy as Stack Overflow and expecting them to sort out relevant from irrelevant comments is asking a bit too much. At this point the flag could be something to the effect that the comments are now obsolete, making a moderators' job that ...


12

Since one of the most common reasons a comment is removed is obsolescence, we should at least be able to flag comments as obsolete after having upvoted them. The workaround to this problem is to flag the question or answer itself, with a custom moderator attention flag, explaining the situation and requesting the comment(s) be removed. Source: jrg♦'s ...


11

When I see one of these flags: If it has devolved into a support session or any other tangential discussion rather than commenting on the post, I suggest they take it to chat. You can do the same. (Although, does the system now does this automatically?) If it is a comment war, I wipe it. You can help by flagging the post to bring it toward the top of the ...


11

I can't comment on whether he's right - I know too little about the topic - but I think Eugene was well within the boundaries of free speech here. It is fair to criticize a software product in harsh words, even though to be taken seriously one would usually want to add some more background information. In any case, it is not punishment-worthy. It would have ...


11

Declined comment flags don't reduce your flag weight. We can't see the flag weight anymore, but when we were able to see it they didn't affect it. And you should not worry about flag weight anyway, SE is currently overhauling the whole flag system, so everything will change anyway and I guess that flag weight will cease to exist in this exact form.


11

Just as stated in the other meta question, flag as obsolete the comments that depend on the rude comment for context. Or if there are too many such comments and you don't want to flag them all, flag the question itself and inform us of the overall situation. You don't have to do it now, though, as I've already taken care of it.


10

I believe these comments should be limited, but not eliminated. The current system in place seems to do a decent job at limiting them. The FAQ explicitly says that comments of this kind are not recommended: Comments are not recommended for any of the following:... Compliments which do not add new information ("+1, great answer!"); instead, up-vote ...


10

I usually flag them, they aren't appropriate at all. The more questions we have, the more traffic we get. If the question is on topic and does not duplicate another, it should be welcomed. People have the option of simply not answering if they feel that the OP did not put in enough effort. Sometimes, especially for beginners, just figuring out what to ...


10

Does it really matter if a two-year-old question that nobody looks at anymore has off-topic comments? Sometimes you have to pick your battle... If a question is active, there'll be enough people passing through to flag inappropriate comments, and it isn't, then it's not the end of the world if it remains unmoderated. Surely there are more useful ways to ...


10

Tackling the OP's central argument that the flagging dialog could be improved by giving the user feedback as to why the button is inactive, and ignoring for a second the sub-argument triggered by his verbose example flag, I agree with the OP. Whether the comment field is 2 characters wide or 2000 characters wide, making the limit easily visible and ...


9

I think a link to the question might help, but in my opinion, people sometimes take the accepting rate too seriously or in a bad sense. I heard Jon Skeet (in one of the latest podcasts) say he will put extra effort in an answer, if he sees a comment like that in a question. I think there is a difference between reminding a user that he should accept ...


9

No, this is not tolerated. These comments are almost universally agreed to be noise. Whenever you see comments like this, flag them for moderator attention and they will be removed. The "too chatty" option is a good choice for a flag reason.     There might be a few edge cases where comments including the phrase +1 are usefully contributing ...


9

We recently moved some permissions checks around in preparation for a project that may still be a secret (I'm not sure). It has to do with API write access. Don't tell anyone. When the comment flagging reaches a threshold, this will cause the comment to be deleted. However, the newly-hardened permission check would now fail in this case, because the current ...


9

When you hit "flag weight zero" your flags are suppressed and don't show up in the flag queue (unless they're on the same post as another, non-suppressed flag). You used to start with 100 flag weight and it went down 10 each declined flag; so, assuming the mechanics are the same (minus the visibility of flag weight) if you have more declined flags than ...


8

OK, there were a pile of flags on that question, and the offensive comments were taken care of in the end, but I think I see what happened here. First off, if you see offensive comments, flag the comments themselves as being rude or offensive. That was done here, and the two comments were removed soon after. I see both of the relevant comments being deleted ...



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