We discovered that “thanks” appears in 1 of 6 comments left under answers. Although it’s less common on questions, the percentage of “thanks” comments have continued to slowly increase over the last few years.
This requires a deeper analysis to truly understand. What percent of people leaving this kind of comment are able to upvote? You need 50 rep to comment and only 15 to upvote. The only exception is that OPs are allowed to comment on answers on their own question regardless of their rep, so the only case where this would even apply would be if they were the OP and had less than 15 rep at the time that they left the comment.
If there are lots of people with 50+ rep who are leaving "thanks!" comments in lieu of upvoting, then the question is why that's happening, and why a "thanks!" button would work better at preventing this. If that's the case, then perhaps an improvement to the voting mechanism would be in order.
Also, has the number of "thanks!" comments increased faster than the number of users and/or the number of answers? If there are, for example, 50% more answers and 50% more "thanks!" comments, that wouldn't really prove much.
If there are lots of people with 50+ rep who are leaving "thanks!" comments in lieu of upvoting, then the question is why that's happening, and why a "thanks!" button would work better at preventing this than merely upvoting.
You also need to see how many of these comments are "thanks, but..." comments (e.g. "thanks, but I was asking how to do this by using bitwise operations, not by using if
statements"). These comments are not noise and would not - and should not - be eliminated by a "thanks!" button.
Also, what percent of these comments could be auto-deleted by the first person flagging them as "no longer needed"? If the percentage is high, wouldn't one solution be to encourage people to flag them as noise?