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There are (or were) heuristics in place for detecting bad answers. At the time they were implemented, new users were presented with a "how to answer" page if an answer ranked highly enough as a "thanks" non-answer. That hasn't stopped people from posting those. The low-quality-posts heuristic that automatically inserted posts in review has such a terrible false positive rate that I believe it should be removed or completely reworked.

That said, I'd love to have a more automated system for detecting non-answers. If you have a demonstrably reliable heuristic for determining non-answers, please do present it, along with evidence of its hits and false positives. The analysis is important here, because in all the schemes I've seen for finding non-answers to flag, none have been useful without human oversight. Simply asserting that "I don't think the false-positive rate would be high" isn't good enough, I want to see some statistics on this.

For example, the phrase "found the solution" is present in a ton of good answersa ton of good answers. It's not inherently bad to state that you've found the solution, and what it is, and this really isn't the most common kind of non-answer I come across. You're far more likely to see someone trying to post a question in an answer or say thanks than that.

My gut feeling is that your proposal wouldn't hit a very large number of answers, and has the potential to have a troubling false positive rate if used to block posts or automatically flag them. I could be convinced otherwise with detailed statistics, though.

There are (or were) heuristics in place for detecting bad answers. At the time they were implemented, new users were presented with a "how to answer" page if an answer ranked highly enough as a "thanks" non-answer. That hasn't stopped people from posting those. The low-quality-posts heuristic that automatically inserted posts in review has such a terrible false positive rate that I believe it should be removed or completely reworked.

That said, I'd love to have a more automated system for detecting non-answers. If you have a demonstrably reliable heuristic for determining non-answers, please do present it, along with evidence of its hits and false positives. The analysis is important here, because in all the schemes I've seen for finding non-answers to flag, none have been useful without human oversight. Simply asserting that "I don't think the false-positive rate would be high" isn't good enough, I want to see some statistics on this.

For example, the phrase "found the solution" is present in a ton of good answers. It's not inherently bad to state that you've found the solution, and what it is, and this really isn't the most common kind of non-answer I come across. You're far more likely to see someone trying to post a question in an answer or say thanks than that.

My gut feeling is that your proposal wouldn't hit a very large number of answers, and has the potential to have a troubling false positive rate if used to block posts or automatically flag them. I could be convinced otherwise with detailed statistics, though.

There are (or were) heuristics in place for detecting bad answers. At the time they were implemented, new users were presented with a "how to answer" page if an answer ranked highly enough as a "thanks" non-answer. That hasn't stopped people from posting those. The low-quality-posts heuristic that automatically inserted posts in review has such a terrible false positive rate that I believe it should be removed or completely reworked.

That said, I'd love to have a more automated system for detecting non-answers. If you have a demonstrably reliable heuristic for determining non-answers, please do present it, along with evidence of its hits and false positives. The analysis is important here, because in all the schemes I've seen for finding non-answers to flag, none have been useful without human oversight. Simply asserting that "I don't think the false-positive rate would be high" isn't good enough, I want to see some statistics on this.

For example, the phrase "found the solution" is present in a ton of good answers. It's not inherently bad to state that you've found the solution, and what it is, and this really isn't the most common kind of non-answer I come across. You're far more likely to see someone trying to post a question in an answer or say thanks than that.

My gut feeling is that your proposal wouldn't hit a very large number of answers, and has the potential to have a troubling false positive rate if used to block posts or automatically flag them. I could be convinced otherwise with detailed statistics, though.

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There are (or were) heuristics in place for detecting bad answersheuristics in place for detecting bad answers. At the time they were implemented, new users were presented with a "how to answer" page if an answer ranked highly enough as a "thanks" non-answer. That hasn't stopped people from posting those. The low-quality-posts heuristic that automatically inserted posts in review has such a terrible false positive rate that I believe it should be removed or completely reworked.

That said, I'd love to have a more automated system for detecting non-answers. If you have a demonstrably reliable heuristic for determining non-answers, please do present it, along with evidence of its hits and false positives. The analysis is important here, because in all the schemes I've seen for finding non-answers to flagall the schemes I've seen for finding non-answers to flag, none have been useful without human oversight. Simply asserting that "I don't think the false-positive rate would be high" isn't good enough, I want to see some statistics on this.

For example, the phrase "found the solution" is present in a ton of good answers. It's not inherently bad to state that you've found the solution, and what it is, and this really isn't the most common kind of non-answer I come across. You're far more likely to see someone trying to post a question in an answer or say thanks than that.

My gut feeling is that your proposal wouldn't hit a very large number of answers, and has the potential to have a troubling false positive rate if used to block posts or automatically flag them. I could be convinced otherwise with detailed statistics, though.

There are (or were) heuristics in place for detecting bad answers. At the time they were implemented, new users were presented with a "how to answer" page if an answer ranked highly enough as a "thanks" non-answer. That hasn't stopped people from posting those. The low-quality-posts heuristic that automatically inserted posts in review has such a terrible false positive rate that I believe it should be removed or completely reworked.

That said, I'd love to have a more automated system for detecting non-answers. If you have a demonstrably reliable heuristic for determining non-answers, please do present it, along with evidence of its hits and false positives. The analysis is important here, because in all the schemes I've seen for finding non-answers to flag, none have been useful without human oversight. Simply asserting that "I don't think the false-positive rate would be high" isn't good enough, I want to see some statistics on this.

For example, the phrase "found the solution" is present in a ton of good answers. It's not inherently bad to state that you've found the solution, and what it is, and this really isn't the most common kind of non-answer I come across. You're far more likely to see someone trying to post a question in an answer or say thanks than that.

My gut feeling is that your proposal wouldn't hit a very large number of answers, and has the potential to have a troubling false positive rate if used to block posts or automatically flag them. I could be convinced otherwise with detailed statistics, though.

There are (or were) heuristics in place for detecting bad answers. At the time they were implemented, new users were presented with a "how to answer" page if an answer ranked highly enough as a "thanks" non-answer. That hasn't stopped people from posting those. The low-quality-posts heuristic that automatically inserted posts in review has such a terrible false positive rate that I believe it should be removed or completely reworked.

That said, I'd love to have a more automated system for detecting non-answers. If you have a demonstrably reliable heuristic for determining non-answers, please do present it, along with evidence of its hits and false positives. The analysis is important here, because in all the schemes I've seen for finding non-answers to flag, none have been useful without human oversight. Simply asserting that "I don't think the false-positive rate would be high" isn't good enough, I want to see some statistics on this.

For example, the phrase "found the solution" is present in a ton of good answers. It's not inherently bad to state that you've found the solution, and what it is, and this really isn't the most common kind of non-answer I come across. You're far more likely to see someone trying to post a question in an answer or say thanks than that.

My gut feeling is that your proposal wouldn't hit a very large number of answers, and has the potential to have a troubling false positive rate if used to block posts or automatically flag them. I could be convinced otherwise with detailed statistics, though.

replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
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There are (or were) heuristics in place for detecting bad answers. At the time they were implemented, new users were presented with a "how to answer" page if an answer ranked highly enough as a "thanks" non-answer. That hasn't stopped people from posting those. The low-quality-posts heuristic that automatically inserted posts in review has such a terrible false positive rate that I believe it should be removed or completely reworkedshould be removed or completely reworked.

That said, I'd love to have a more automated system for detecting non-answers. If you have a demonstrably reliable heuristic for determining non-answers, please do present it, along with evidence of its hits and false positives. The analysis is important here, because in all the schemes I've seen for finding non-answers to flag, none have been useful without human oversight. Simply asserting that "I don't think the false-positive rate would be high" isn't good enough, I want to see some statistics on this.

For example, the phrase "found the solution" is present in a ton of good answers. It's not inherently bad to state that you've found the solution, and what it is, and this really isn't the most common kind of non-answer I come across. You're far more likely to see someone trying to post a question in an answer or say thanks than that.

My gut feeling is that your proposal wouldn't hit a very large number of answers, and has the potential to have a troubling false positive rate if used to block posts or automatically flag them. I could be convinced otherwise with detailed statistics, though.

There are (or were) heuristics in place for detecting bad answers. At the time they were implemented, new users were presented with a "how to answer" page if an answer ranked highly enough as a "thanks" non-answer. That hasn't stopped people from posting those. The low-quality-posts heuristic that automatically inserted posts in review has such a terrible false positive rate that I believe it should be removed or completely reworked.

That said, I'd love to have a more automated system for detecting non-answers. If you have a demonstrably reliable heuristic for determining non-answers, please do present it, along with evidence of its hits and false positives. The analysis is important here, because in all the schemes I've seen for finding non-answers to flag, none have been useful without human oversight. Simply asserting that "I don't think the false-positive rate would be high" isn't good enough, I want to see some statistics on this.

For example, the phrase "found the solution" is present in a ton of good answers. It's not inherently bad to state that you've found the solution, and what it is, and this really isn't the most common kind of non-answer I come across. You're far more likely to see someone trying to post a question in an answer or say thanks than that.

My gut feeling is that your proposal wouldn't hit a very large number of answers, and has the potential to have a troubling false positive rate if used to block posts or automatically flag them. I could be convinced otherwise with detailed statistics, though.

There are (or were) heuristics in place for detecting bad answers. At the time they were implemented, new users were presented with a "how to answer" page if an answer ranked highly enough as a "thanks" non-answer. That hasn't stopped people from posting those. The low-quality-posts heuristic that automatically inserted posts in review has such a terrible false positive rate that I believe it should be removed or completely reworked.

That said, I'd love to have a more automated system for detecting non-answers. If you have a demonstrably reliable heuristic for determining non-answers, please do present it, along with evidence of its hits and false positives. The analysis is important here, because in all the schemes I've seen for finding non-answers to flag, none have been useful without human oversight. Simply asserting that "I don't think the false-positive rate would be high" isn't good enough, I want to see some statistics on this.

For example, the phrase "found the solution" is present in a ton of good answers. It's not inherently bad to state that you've found the solution, and what it is, and this really isn't the most common kind of non-answer I come across. You're far more likely to see someone trying to post a question in an answer or say thanks than that.

My gut feeling is that your proposal wouldn't hit a very large number of answers, and has the potential to have a troubling false positive rate if used to block posts or automatically flag them. I could be convinced otherwise with detailed statistics, though.

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Brad Larson Mod
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