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Mark Amery
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I'm actually inclined to defend Yvette's decision to decline this flag, even if she herself now thinks it was the wrong call.

If a short quote from a source is sufficient to answer a question - whether that source is external or is another Stack Overflow post - then so be it. That's not, in itself, a problem with an answer. It is a clue (not a guarantee, but a clue) that the question being answered is bad or is a duplicate, but not grounds for bringing down the mods on the answer, in my view.

In this case, there are some reasons to be annoyed at the answer you flagged:

  • It's not really an answer to the question. It's answering a question that isn't specific to Internet Explorer with information that is specific to Internet Explorer; that's unhelpful.
  • It's crediting the other Stack Overflow post as the source of the quote, but really that other Stack Overflow post is itself quoting from the MSDN docs. It would've been more useful to the reader to quote the original source.

But these aren't points requiring moderator intervention. The first is a reason to downvote, and the second can be solved with an edit (or just a grumpy comment, if you think that the answer is unsalvageably bad for the first reason and don't want to contribute any work that'll help preserve it). But neither issue makes the answer a rules violation or an exceptional case requiring mod action. It's just another crap answer on a site with millions of them.

For those reasons, I'd've downvoted, commented, and moved on.

In any case, even if you do think that the issues above justify moderator action, none of that were the case you didn't highlight them in your flag comment. Instead, you just complained that the answer was nothing but a quote (with attribution), which in my view isn't even a problem in the first place. If it were, then the original answer by Quentin would be equally deserving of moderator action; why didn't you also flag that one?

I'm actually inclined to defend Yvette's decision to decline this flag, even if she herself now thinks it was the wrong call.

If a short quote from a source is sufficient to answer a question - whether that source is external or is another Stack Overflow post - then so be it. That's not, in itself, a problem with an answer. It is a clue (not a guarantee, but a clue) that the question being answered is bad or is a duplicate, but not grounds for bringing down the mods on the answer, in my view.

In this case, there are some reasons to be annoyed at the answer you flagged:

  • It's not really an answer to the question. It's answering a question that isn't specific to Internet Explorer with information that is specific to Internet Explorer; that's unhelpful.
  • It's crediting the other Stack Overflow post as the source of the quote, but really that other Stack Overflow post is itself quoting from the MSDN docs. It would've been more useful to the reader to quote the original source.

But these aren't points requiring moderator intervention. The first is a reason to downvote, and the second can be solved with an edit (or just a grumpy comment, if you think that the answer is unsalvageably bad for the first reason and don't want to contribute any work that'll help preserve it). But neither issue makes the answer a rules violation or an exceptional case requiring mod action. It's just another crap answer on a site with millions of them.

For those reasons, I'd've downvoted, commented, and moved on.

In any case, even if you do think that the issues above justify moderator action, none of that were the case you didn't highlight them in your flag comment. Instead, you just complained that the answer was nothing but a quote (with attribution), which in my view isn't even a problem in the first place. If it were, then the original answer by Quentin would be equally deserving of moderator action; why didn't you also flag that one?

I'm actually inclined to defend Yvette's decision to decline this flag, even if she herself now thinks it was the wrong call.

If a short quote from a source is sufficient to answer a question - whether that source is external or is another Stack Overflow post - then so be it. That's not, in itself, a problem with an answer. It is a clue (not a guarantee, but a clue) that the question being answered is bad or is a duplicate, but not grounds for bringing down the mods on the answer, in my view.

In this case, there are some reasons to be annoyed at the answer you flagged:

  • It's not really an answer to the question. It's answering a question that isn't specific to Internet Explorer with information that is specific to Internet Explorer; that's unhelpful.
  • It's crediting the other Stack Overflow post as the source of the quote, but really that other Stack Overflow post is itself quoting from the MSDN docs. It would've been more useful to the reader to quote the original source.

But these aren't points requiring moderator intervention. The first is a reason to downvote, and the second can be solved with an edit (or just a grumpy comment, if you think that the answer is unsalvageably bad for the first reason and don't want to contribute any work that'll help preserve it). But neither issue makes the answer a rules violation or an exceptional case requiring mod action. It's just another crap answer on a site with millions of them.

For those reasons, I'd've downvoted, commented, and moved on.

In any case, even if you do think that the issues above justify moderator action, you didn't highlight them in your flag comment. Instead, you just complained that the answer was nothing but a quote (with attribution), which in my view isn't even a problem in the first place. If it were, then the original answer by Quentin would be equally deserving of moderator action; why didn't you also flag that one?

Source Link
Mark Amery
  • 153.6k
  • 15
  • 128
  • 195

I'm actually inclined to defend Yvette's decision to decline this flag, even if she herself now thinks it was the wrong call.

If a short quote from a source is sufficient to answer a question - whether that source is external or is another Stack Overflow post - then so be it. That's not, in itself, a problem with an answer. It is a clue (not a guarantee, but a clue) that the question being answered is bad or is a duplicate, but not grounds for bringing down the mods on the answer, in my view.

In this case, there are some reasons to be annoyed at the answer you flagged:

  • It's not really an answer to the question. It's answering a question that isn't specific to Internet Explorer with information that is specific to Internet Explorer; that's unhelpful.
  • It's crediting the other Stack Overflow post as the source of the quote, but really that other Stack Overflow post is itself quoting from the MSDN docs. It would've been more useful to the reader to quote the original source.

But these aren't points requiring moderator intervention. The first is a reason to downvote, and the second can be solved with an edit (or just a grumpy comment, if you think that the answer is unsalvageably bad for the first reason and don't want to contribute any work that'll help preserve it). But neither issue makes the answer a rules violation or an exceptional case requiring mod action. It's just another crap answer on a site with millions of them.

For those reasons, I'd've downvoted, commented, and moved on.

In any case, even if you do think that the issues above justify moderator action, none of that were the case you didn't highlight them in your flag comment. Instead, you just complained that the answer was nothing but a quote (with attribution), which in my view isn't even a problem in the first place. If it were, then the original answer by Quentin would be equally deserving of moderator action; why didn't you also flag that one?