Update: The discussion here led to the following feature request.
When askers provide feedback / ask for clarification on an answer of mine, and it warrants a response of general interest (as opposed to an incidental, ephemeral response), I respond by updating my answer rather than in a comment - I think this the preferable way to handle that.
Because I don't want to repeat the response in a comment, I usually just say, "@{user}, please see my update.", with no or little more context.
While such a comment is obviously of a transient nature, it is vital that the asker see it before it gets removed.
If it gets removed prematurely, everyone loses:
The asker never learns of the update and may not get their problem solved.
Future readers see only the asker's outdated comment which no longer matches the answer, amounting to a confusing distraction.
Anecdotally, I've seen many of my "Please see my update" comments disappear not long after posting, before the asker has had a chance to see them.
I don't know the cause:
- (a) "No longer needed" flaggers, with moderators obliging due to lack of context?
- (b) Some automated mechanism?
If (a), I suggest abstaining from flagging such comments unless either a reasonably long time has passed or you've personally verified that the recipient has seen the comment (as can be guessed from whether they've visited the site since).
If (b), I suggest either making the mechanism smart enough to not delete until either some time after the recipient has read the comment notification or not until a reasonably long time has passed, say two weeks.
To address the comment suggesting explicit opt-in via following an answer:
As a commenter - especially an inexperienced one - it is reasonable to expect to be notified automatically.
Even experienced users have a reasonable expectation of
@
-addressed comments reaching them.Inexperienced user may not even know of the option to follow a post.
In other words:
Don't put the burden of an additional, non-obvious step which shouldn't be necessary on someone who has already posted a comment with the implicit and reasonable expectation to be notified of reply comments.
The net effect of doing so makes the two problems described above persist.
Even those who know about the 'Follow' feature may not want to use it, because, as Ryan M points out in the comments, "the 'Follow' button produces an absolute torrent of notifications when you want one. It's not a very good solution to this problem."
In short:
- Prematurely removing
@
-addressed comments amounts to inappropriate interference with the notification system - to everyone's detriment.