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replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
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I'm sorry. If it is posted, and I can't delete it, I apologize...I'm sorry. If it is posted, and I can't delete it, I apologize...

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I'm sorry. If it is posted, and I can't delete it, I apologize...

fdfdsfs;fdsfsdfsdf sdffdsfds fdsf dsf dsf sdfdsf dsfd sfsd fdsf d

I'm sorry. If it is posted, and I can't delete it, I apologize...

replaced http://meta.stackexchange.com/ with https://meta.stackexchange.com/
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Thus, "low quality" came into being, and was immediately hated by one and all.

Thus, "low quality" came into being, and was immediately hated by one and all.

replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
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In the spirit of the seasonIn the spirit of the season, let's start out with some statistics for how flags were handled by moderators in 2016:

  1. Moderators don't handle very many of these. In fact, moderators handle less than half of all VLQ flags raisedmoderators handle less than half of all VLQ flags raised.

  2. Most of them are helpful. Not as overwhelmingly as Not An Answer flags (which also still manage to collect regular complaints here on meta), but notably more than spam which you'd think would be less ambiguous. Critically, they're MUCH less abused than "Other" flags, of which several times more flags are declined every day - more on that in a bit. Oh - and while it isn't shown in the table above, I feel I must note that the success rate is somewhat worse for flags handled in /review, by ordinary users: only 78.36 % of those are marked Helpful.

  3. In real numbers, Not An Answer has a much bigger impact. Far more NAA flags are processed every day, both helpful and declined. And... I'd guess there's a pretty good chance that removing VLQ would just translate into slightly more NAA and Other flags (last I checkedlast I checked, there was a roughly 9% overlap between NAA and VLQ).

...Now, I'll gloss over the problems that arose trying to handle all of those flags; you've been around for most of that anyway, and I already told that story a couple of years backI already told that story a couple of years back. The relevant point here is that this flag (along with Not an Answer and all of the close flags) exists because that's how we were able to stay on top of a whelming flood of crap for all these years.

In the spirit of the season, let's start out with some statistics for how flags were handled by moderators in 2016:

  1. Moderators don't handle very many of these. In fact, moderators handle less than half of all VLQ flags raised.

  2. Most of them are helpful. Not as overwhelmingly as Not An Answer flags (which also still manage to collect regular complaints here on meta), but notably more than spam which you'd think would be less ambiguous. Critically, they're MUCH less abused than "Other" flags, of which several times more flags are declined every day - more on that in a bit. Oh - and while it isn't shown in the table above, I feel I must note that the success rate is somewhat worse for flags handled in /review, by ordinary users: only 78.36 % of those are marked Helpful.

  3. In real numbers, Not An Answer has a much bigger impact. Far more NAA flags are processed every day, both helpful and declined. And... I'd guess there's a pretty good chance that removing VLQ would just translate into slightly more NAA and Other flags (last I checked, there was a roughly 9% overlap between NAA and VLQ).

...Now, I'll gloss over the problems that arose trying to handle all of those flags; you've been around for most of that anyway, and I already told that story a couple of years back. The relevant point here is that this flag (along with Not an Answer and all of the close flags) exists because that's how we were able to stay on top of a whelming flood of crap for all these years.

In the spirit of the season, let's start out with some statistics for how flags were handled by moderators in 2016:

  1. Moderators don't handle very many of these. In fact, moderators handle less than half of all VLQ flags raised.

  2. Most of them are helpful. Not as overwhelmingly as Not An Answer flags (which also still manage to collect regular complaints here on meta), but notably more than spam which you'd think would be less ambiguous. Critically, they're MUCH less abused than "Other" flags, of which several times more flags are declined every day - more on that in a bit. Oh - and while it isn't shown in the table above, I feel I must note that the success rate is somewhat worse for flags handled in /review, by ordinary users: only 78.36 % of those are marked Helpful.

  3. In real numbers, Not An Answer has a much bigger impact. Far more NAA flags are processed every day, both helpful and declined. And... I'd guess there's a pretty good chance that removing VLQ would just translate into slightly more NAA and Other flags (last I checked, there was a roughly 9% overlap between NAA and VLQ).

...Now, I'll gloss over the problems that arose trying to handle all of those flags; you've been around for most of that anyway, and I already told that story a couple of years back. The relevant point here is that this flag (along with Not an Answer and all of the close flags) exists because that's how we were able to stay on top of a whelming flood of crap for all these years.

I can't count
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Shog9
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Shog9
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