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Yes, we do. New answers to old questions have a significant more chance of being problematic than other answers; they generally are of the form "Thanks!!" or "I have the same problem!", which is a typical non-answer and should be flagged as "Not An Answer", then deleted. It's also a great list to find spam, plagiarism, new answers that are duplicates of old answers, the same user copy-posting an answer everywhere or even, if you look more closely, lots of voting fraud and robo-reviewers. Additionally, it's also a great way to edit some good, new, answers into shape; most of these are from low reputation users (≤ 100 of reputation; just right now, page 1 has more than 50% of them for example) and improving their contribution is a great way to welcome them.

It isn't to say that this doesn't happen on new questions, but when an old question is updated, it receives a lot less attention (everyone focusing on the front page of their tags), and therefore, things pass through without much review. I'm pretty sure that 90% of my (~35k) helpful flags are from posts in that list. In fact, there are so many of them that there is even a bot that was developed to help with detectionthat there is even a bot that was developed to help with detection and report in chat suspicious answers for review. I used to use all of 100 flags daily for lots of consecutive months before this.

The bottom-line is that that moderator tool provides a (sadly, very crude) way of reviewing new things that are posted on the site. And it needs all the persons going through it as it can get. There is on average 1 new answer to an old question every 30 seconds, and a given new answer to an old question likely needs acting on (again, page 1 right now, consisting of 20 answers, would need at the very least 4 edits and 4 NAA/VLQ flags...).

Yes, we do. New answers to old questions have a significant more chance of being problematic than other answers; they generally are of the form "Thanks!!" or "I have the same problem!", which is a typical non-answer and should be flagged as "Not An Answer", then deleted. It's also a great list to find spam, plagiarism, new answers that are duplicates of old answers, the same user copy-posting an answer everywhere or even, if you look more closely, lots of voting fraud and robo-reviewers. Additionally, it's also a great way to edit some good, new, answers into shape; most of these are from low reputation users (≤ 100 of reputation; just right now, page 1 has more than 50% of them for example) and improving their contribution is a great way to welcome them.

It isn't to say that this doesn't happen on new questions, but when an old question is updated, it receives a lot less attention (everyone focusing on the front page of their tags), and therefore, things pass through without much review. I'm pretty sure that 90% of my (~35k) helpful flags are from posts in that list. In fact, there are so many of them that there is even a bot that was developed to help with detection and report in chat suspicious answers for review. I used to use all of 100 flags daily for lots of consecutive months before this.

The bottom-line is that that moderator tool provides a (sadly, very crude) way of reviewing new things that are posted on the site. And it needs all the persons going through it as it can get. There is on average 1 new answer to an old question every 30 seconds, and a given new answer to an old question likely needs acting on (again, page 1 right now, consisting of 20 answers, would need at the very least 4 edits and 4 NAA/VLQ flags...).

Yes, we do. New answers to old questions have a significant more chance of being problematic than other answers; they generally are of the form "Thanks!!" or "I have the same problem!", which is a typical non-answer and should be flagged as "Not An Answer", then deleted. It's also a great list to find spam, plagiarism, new answers that are duplicates of old answers, the same user copy-posting an answer everywhere or even, if you look more closely, lots of voting fraud and robo-reviewers. Additionally, it's also a great way to edit some good, new, answers into shape; most of these are from low reputation users (≤ 100 of reputation; just right now, page 1 has more than 50% of them for example) and improving their contribution is a great way to welcome them.

It isn't to say that this doesn't happen on new questions, but when an old question is updated, it receives a lot less attention (everyone focusing on the front page of their tags), and therefore, things pass through without much review. I'm pretty sure that 90% of my (~35k) helpful flags are from posts in that list. In fact, there are so many of them that there is even a bot that was developed to help with detection and report in chat suspicious answers for review. I used to use all of 100 flags daily for lots of consecutive months before this.

The bottom-line is that that moderator tool provides a (sadly, very crude) way of reviewing new things that are posted on the site. And it needs all the persons going through it as it can get. There is on average 1 new answer to an old question every 30 seconds, and a given new answer to an old question likely needs acting on (again, page 1 right now, consisting of 20 answers, would need at the very least 4 edits and 4 NAA/VLQ flags...).

replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
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Yes, we do. New answers to old questions have a significant more chance of being problematic than other answers; they generally are of the form "Thanks!!" or "I have the same problem!", which is a typical non-answer and should be flagged as "Not An Answer", then deleted. It's also a great list to find spam, plagiarism, new answers that are duplicates of old answers, the same user copy-posting an answer everywhere or even, if you look more closely, lots of voting fraud and robo-reviewers. Additionally, it's also a great way to edit some good, new, answers into shape; most of these are from low reputation users (≤ 100 of reputation; just right now, page 1 has more than 50% of them for example) and improving their contribution is a great way to welcome them.

It isn't to say that this doesn't happen on new questions, but when an old question is updated, it receives a lot less attention (everyone focusing on the front page of their tags), and therefore, things pass through without much review. I'm pretty sure that 90% of my (~35k) helpful flags are from posts in that list. In fact, there are so many of them that there is even a bot that was developed to help with detection and report in chat suspicious answers for review. I used to use all of 100 flags daily for lots of consecutive months before this.

The bottom-line is that that moderator tool provides a (sadly, very crude) way of reviewing new things that are posted on the site. And it needs all the persons going through it as it can get. There is on average 1 new answer to an old question every 30 seconds1 new answer to an old question every 30 seconds, and a given new answer to an old question likely needs acting on (again, page 1 right now, consisting of 20 answers, would need at the very least 4 edits and 4 NAA/VLQ flags...).

Yes, we do. New answers to old questions have a significant more chance of being problematic than other answers; they generally are of the form "Thanks!!" or "I have the same problem!", which is a typical non-answer and should be flagged as "Not An Answer", then deleted. It's also a great list to find spam, plagiarism, new answers that are duplicates of old answers, the same user copy-posting an answer everywhere or even, if you look more closely, lots of voting fraud and robo-reviewers. Additionally, it's also a great way to edit some good, new, answers into shape; most of these are from low reputation users (≤ 100 of reputation; just right now, page 1 has more than 50% of them for example) and improving their contribution is a great way to welcome them.

It isn't to say that this doesn't happen on new questions, but when an old question is updated, it receives a lot less attention (everyone focusing on the front page of their tags), and therefore, things pass through without much review. I'm pretty sure that 90% of my (~35k) helpful flags are from posts in that list. In fact, there are so many of them that there is even a bot that was developed to help with detection and report in chat suspicious answers for review. I used to use all of 100 flags daily for lots of consecutive months before this.

The bottom-line is that that moderator tool provides a (sadly, very crude) way of reviewing new things that are posted on the site. And it needs all the persons going through it as it can get. There is on average 1 new answer to an old question every 30 seconds, and a given new answer to an old question likely needs acting on (again, page 1 right now, consisting of 20 answers, would need at the very least 4 edits and 4 NAA/VLQ flags...).

Yes, we do. New answers to old questions have a significant more chance of being problematic than other answers; they generally are of the form "Thanks!!" or "I have the same problem!", which is a typical non-answer and should be flagged as "Not An Answer", then deleted. It's also a great list to find spam, plagiarism, new answers that are duplicates of old answers, the same user copy-posting an answer everywhere or even, if you look more closely, lots of voting fraud and robo-reviewers. Additionally, it's also a great way to edit some good, new, answers into shape; most of these are from low reputation users (≤ 100 of reputation; just right now, page 1 has more than 50% of them for example) and improving their contribution is a great way to welcome them.

It isn't to say that this doesn't happen on new questions, but when an old question is updated, it receives a lot less attention (everyone focusing on the front page of their tags), and therefore, things pass through without much review. I'm pretty sure that 90% of my (~35k) helpful flags are from posts in that list. In fact, there are so many of them that there is even a bot that was developed to help with detection and report in chat suspicious answers for review. I used to use all of 100 flags daily for lots of consecutive months before this.

The bottom-line is that that moderator tool provides a (sadly, very crude) way of reviewing new things that are posted on the site. And it needs all the persons going through it as it can get. There is on average 1 new answer to an old question every 30 seconds, and a given new answer to an old question likely needs acting on (again, page 1 right now, consisting of 20 answers, would need at the very least 4 edits and 4 NAA/VLQ flags...).

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TylerH
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Yes, we do. New answers to old questions have a significant more chance of being problematic than other answers; they generally are of the form "Thanks!!" or "I have the same problem!", which is a typical non-answer and should be flagged as "Not An Answer", then deleted. It's also a great list to find spam, plagiarism, new answers that are duplicates of old answers, the same user copy-posting an answer everywhere or even, if you look more closely, lots of voting fraud and robo-reviewers. Additionally, it's also a great way to edit some good, new, answers into shape; most of these are from low reputation users (≤ 100 of reputation; just right now, page 1 has more than 50% of them for example) and improving their contribution is a great way to welcome them.

It isn't to say that this doesn't happen on new questions, but when an old question is updated, it receives a lot less attention (everyone focusing on the front page of their tags), and therefore, things pass through without much review. I'm pretty sure that 90% of my (~35k) helpful flags are from posts in that list. In fact, there are so many of them that there is even a bot that was developed to help with detection and report in chat suspicious answers for review. I used to use all of 100 flags daily for lots of consecutive months before this.

The bottom-line is that that moderator tool provides a (sadly, very crude) way of reviewing new things that are posted on the site. And it needs all the persons going through it as it can get. There is on average 1 new answer to an old question every 30 seconds, and ita given new answer to an old question likely needs something to doacting on (again, page 1 right now, consisting of 20 answers, would need at the very least 4 edits and 4 NAA/VLQ flags...).

Yes, we do. New answers to old questions have a significant more chance of being problematic than other answers; they generally are of the form "Thanks!!" or "I have the same problem!", which is a typical non-answer and should be flagged as "Not An Answer", then deleted. It's also a great list to find spam, plagiarism, new answers that are duplicates of old answers, the same user copy-posting an answer everywhere or even, if you look more closely, lots of voting fraud and robo-reviewers. Additionally, it's also a great way to edit some good, new, answers into shape; most of these are from low reputation users (≤ 100 of reputation; just right now, page 1 has more than 50% of them for example) and improving their contribution is a great way to welcome them.

It isn't to say that this doesn't happen on new questions, but when an old question is updated, it receives a lot less attention (everyone focusing on the front page of their tags), and therefore, things pass through without much review. I'm pretty sure that 90% of my (~35k) helpful flags are from posts in that list. In fact, there are so many of them that there is even a bot that was developed to help with detection and report in chat suspicious answers for review. I used to use all of 100 flags daily for lots of consecutive months before this.

The bottom-line is that that moderator tool provides a (sadly, very crude) way of reviewing new things that are posted on the site. And it needs all the persons going through it as it can get. There is on average 1 new answer to an old question every 30 seconds, and it likely needs something to do (again, page 1 right now, consisting of 20 answers, would need at the very least 4 edits and 4 NAA/VLQ flags...).

Yes, we do. New answers to old questions have a significant more chance of being problematic than other answers; they generally are of the form "Thanks!!" or "I have the same problem!", which is a typical non-answer and should be flagged as "Not An Answer", then deleted. It's also a great list to find spam, plagiarism, new answers that are duplicates of old answers, the same user copy-posting an answer everywhere or even, if you look more closely, lots of voting fraud and robo-reviewers. Additionally, it's also a great way to edit some good, new, answers into shape; most of these are from low reputation users (≤ 100 of reputation; just right now, page 1 has more than 50% of them for example) and improving their contribution is a great way to welcome them.

It isn't to say that this doesn't happen on new questions, but when an old question is updated, it receives a lot less attention (everyone focusing on the front page of their tags), and therefore, things pass through without much review. I'm pretty sure that 90% of my (~35k) helpful flags are from posts in that list. In fact, there are so many of them that there is even a bot that was developed to help with detection and report in chat suspicious answers for review. I used to use all of 100 flags daily for lots of consecutive months before this.

The bottom-line is that that moderator tool provides a (sadly, very crude) way of reviewing new things that are posted on the site. And it needs all the persons going through it as it can get. There is on average 1 new answer to an old question every 30 seconds, and a given new answer to an old question likely needs acting on (again, page 1 right now, consisting of 20 answers, would need at the very least 4 edits and 4 NAA/VLQ flags...).

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Tunaki
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