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Jul 14, 2023 at 2:07 comment added starball I also find it irksome that the things I spend all my 100 post flags on as they pop up every day (I.e. new flagworthy things) are easily toolable, such as new non-answers on old question. Dharman has a bot, and there's also Natty. Why isn't the system doing things about this? These are not new problems, nor are they problems that are difficult to get sizable positive changes on. If the problem is that the flags are too much for the mods alone, then that's a solvable problem too.
Jul 14, 2023 at 2:01 comment added starball Point #2 does not seem to have aged very well. I do not see recent cases of old, fairly simple high-impact, proposals for automatic prevention of flag-worthy things getting dev time or even company attention. Ex. Automatically recognize and remove "thanks". I made one such proposal myself: Make short "saved my <time>" comments single-flag-deletable and went and did the legwork of the SEDE analysis. silence.
Jul 14, 2023 at 1:55 comment added starball I disagree with #1 as a generalized point. This is a long-term knowledge base. Particularly on high-score/view-count posts, the impact of things that should be flagged is worth multiple-times the impact of the average of each and every new single thing that comes up every day.
Nov 16, 2014 at 20:25 comment added George Stocker Mod @damryfbfnetsi We don't encourage it because with our volume, we seldom have less than hundreds of flags in the queue. We have enough of a backlog and enough daily traffic that it's a full time job just to keep up with what's coming in, let alone the old stuff.
Nov 15, 2014 at 14:52 comment added Infinite Recursion Thanks @Brad, and mod team for processing the plagiarism flags so fast despite the volume of flags.
Nov 14, 2014 at 9:08 comment added CRABOLO I'm all for you flagging with the help of SEDE queries. But 35 NAA flags within 5 minutes seems to be a little overkill. Not saying you weren't doing this, but always make sure to read the question and answer. Lots of questions ask for a link only, so it's best just to close the question rather than delete an answer that was asked for.
Nov 14, 2014 at 2:36 comment added Brad Larson Mod The recent anti-plagiarism queries were a good example of these done right: people read the posts, identified the material they were copied from, and we were able to process those rapidly. On the flip side, another group started running queries for answers under a certain length and flagged every one of those that came up as "very low quality", no matter if they were good answers or not. That was less helpful.
Nov 14, 2014 at 2:33 comment added Brad Larson Mod In addition to the above, it's also our experience that SEDE queries tend to get abused for flagging items. A few responsible users will run these queries, read each of the items that come up, and flag the ones that really need our attention. Others then use these queries and start blindly flagging everything that comes up, which ends up wasting a lot of time and burying the signal in piles of noise.
Nov 14, 2014 at 0:01 history answered George StockerMod CC BY-SA 3.0