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Fixed spelling/grammar; formatted
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Nathan Tuggy
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Apparently they were declined under the premise that the back-end will now handle these flags differently...differently… but I'm not buying.

The not constructive flag was meant to replace the off topic flag. Basically, it is used to flag any comment that goes off into a unrelated topic, like the weather on the Alps, when the post is about ML regression in C. A user that repeatedly go off topic on posts, SHOULD be warned by a moderator to change that behavior, which I believe is the intent of the change in how these flags are being handled by the system, the same way an user that is repeatedly rude, or a systematic spammer.

I really believe that even when those changes were live, the way to handle the flags by the moderators SHOULD NOT suffer changes (or at very least, wait until there is feedback), and those flags SHOULD NOT have been declined either.

Now, if there's a believebelief there should be a change, it SHOULD HAVEhave been informedpublicized before such a thing happens, not just unilaterally changechanging the way the users and the entirelyentirety of the Stack Exchange user base knows about the system.

Apparently they were declined under the premise that the back-end will now handle these flags differently... but I'm not buying.

The not constructive flag was meant to replace the off topic flag. Basically, it is used to flag any comment that goes off into a unrelated topic, like the weather on the Alps, when the post is about ML regression in C. A user that repeatedly go off topic on posts, SHOULD be warned by a moderator to change that behavior, which I believe is the intent of the change in how these flags are being handled by the system, the same way an user that is repeatedly rude, or a systematic spammer.

I really believe that even when those changes were live, the way to handle the flags by the moderators SHOULD NOT suffer changes (or at very least, wait until there is feedback), and those flags SHOULD NOT have been declined either.

Now, if there's a believe there should be a change, it SHOULD HAVE been informed before such thing happens, not just unilaterally change the way the users and the entirely of the Stack Exchange user base knows about the system.

Apparently they were declined under the premise that the back-end will now handle these flags differently… but I'm not buying.

The not constructive flag was meant to replace the off topic flag. Basically, it is used to flag any comment that goes off into a unrelated topic, like the weather on the Alps, when the post is about ML regression in C. A user that repeatedly go off topic on posts, SHOULD be warned by a moderator to change that behavior, which I believe is the intent of the change in how these flags are being handled by the system, the same way an user that is repeatedly rude, or a systematic spammer.

I really believe that even when those changes were live, the way to handle the flags by the moderators SHOULD NOT suffer changes (or at very least, wait until there is feedback), and those flags SHOULD NOT have been declined either.

Now, if there's a belief there should be a change, it SHOULD have been publicized before such a thing happens, not just unilaterally changing the way the entirety of the Stack Exchange user base knows about the system.

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Braiam
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Apparently they were declined under the premise that the back-end will now handle these flags differently... but I'm not buying.

The not constructive flag was meant to replace the off topic flag. Basically, it is used to flag any comment that goes off into a unrelated topic, like the weather on the Alps, when the post is about ML regression in C. A user that repeatedly go off topic on posts, SHOULD be warned by a moderator to change that behavior, which I believe is the intent of the change in how these flags are being handled by the system, the same way an user that is repeatedly rude, or a systematic spammer.

I really believe that even when those changes were live, the way to handle the flags by the moderators SHOULD NOT suffer changes (or at very least, wait until there is feedback), and those flags SHOULD NOT have been declined either.

Now, if there's a believe there should be a change, it SHOULD HAVE been informed before such thing happens, not just unilaterally change the way the users and the entirely of the Stack Exchange user base knows about the system.