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I flagged this question as potentially needing to be protected. It was declined. Three weeks later, the question was protected.

It's clear that the question was protected due to a surge in popularity rather as a response to my flag, so it's not like someone went "denied! now let me go protect that" or anything. But still, prophesy.

Does the system have any way to acknowledge this sort of thing, like a flag-review-review (e.g. "this flag declination has been declined"), or an Internet cookie (badge), or something? As it is, it feels like telling the boss about an idea for a cool new widget, getting rejected, and then seeing the widget a few weeks later on a shopping trip.

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  • What was the reason given when it was declined?
    – Taryn
    Jun 6, 2015 at 0:26
  • My flag pointed out the appearance of several derivative answers, and the declination reason was "Protect only works on low-rep users." Jun 6, 2015 at 0:30
  • 3
    Well, whoever declined was right in pointing out it would be useless there... Jun 6, 2015 at 0:34
  • Yes, but perhaps those answers were the drop in pressure before the storm and my barometer is good. Jun 6, 2015 at 0:41
  • @TigerhawkT3 Can I see the flag's message verbatim?
    – Veedrac
    Jun 6, 2015 at 0:48
  • "Might need to be protected - nearly half of the answers are copycats of previous answers." Jun 6, 2015 at 0:49
  • 2
    Were I a diamond, perhaps I would have marked that disputed instead (which I believe is an option for them), but otherwise, yeah, this is just one of those unfortunate rough edges. It would be nice to have a way of re-validating flags that turn out correct, but so far it hasn't been worth the trouble of building the system. Jun 6, 2015 at 0:56
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    @NathanTuggy Moderators can't dispute flags, we can mark them helpful or declined.
    – Taryn
    Jun 6, 2015 at 12:54
  • @bluefeet: I guess I was mistaken. Good to know. Jun 6, 2015 at 14:14
  • 2
    @bluefeet Do you think that would be a useful middle ground, if they could mark a flag as disputed? As if to say, "The flag is not completely invalid, I just don't agree." Jun 7, 2015 at 18:59
  • 2
    @Chris Baker: I'd just mark it as helpful in that case. A helpful flag has merit but may not necessarily result in action taken.
    – BoltClock
    Jun 8, 2015 at 4:55

2 Answers 2

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An arbitrary SO user passed by, not a moderator, he had enough rep to protect the question without requiring assistance from a moderator or have his action subjected to review. Something anybody can do once they have 15,000 points.

His action has no connection whatsoever with your flag, or the reason a moderator declined it, he was completely unaware of it. Whether it was correct for him to protect the question is not at issue, any other user with enough rep can simply unprotect it again. I doubt anybody will.

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You requested that the question be protected due to copycat answers. I'm not the moderator who declined your flag, but the copycat answers you refer to were all posted by users with hundreds to even thousands of reputation points (and I did check the rep history of all the recent posters to see if they had that much at the time of posting). There were no answers posted by drive-by users, and so there was no point protecting the question as it would simply not stop established users from posting more answers. For this reason, I would have declined your flag as well.

If the user who protected the question later did do so on the basis of popularity as you surmise, then that is somewhat different. A surge in popularity would imply a possibility of more drive-by or low-rep users posting copycat answers, so protecting a question would certainly have been effective. But the mere presence of copycat answers alone does not warrant protection unless the vast majority of such answers were posted by users who would be blocked by protection.

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