For the backstory, see this post about prematurely deleted, user-targeted "please see my update" comments.
Motivation:
Prevent comment proliferation by making a dedicated flag available to post owners in the following scenarios:
In a comment, the post owner of a question has been asked for clarification / has been encouraged to include additional information.
In a comment, the post owner of an answer has been asked for clarification of aspects of the answer, typically by the asker.
The new flag would allow the post owner - after having updated the question / answer - to combine the "no longer needed" (NLN) flag with an automated behind-the-scenes notification of the commenter (whose identity is implied by the comment being flagged) that their comment has been addressed in an update to the post, as fleshed out below.
To be clear: Not all comments warrant updating of the post in response, but it is common especially for questions, and often useful for answers, assuming that the update is of general interest: instead of responding in a comment - creating noise that may have to be cleaned up later - the post itself is improved.
The notification should be omitted if the commenter is already following the post in question.
Benefits:
Ephemeral comments whose only information content is "please see my update" are prevented - no need for later cleanup.
Commenters are notified of post updates that are likely important to them, which is especially important for new and inexperienced / casual users.
Yes, there is the option to 'Follow' a post, BUT:
Update: tl;dr: No one should have to 'Follow' a post if all they care about is reliably getting notified of targeted replies, which overzealous flaggers can currently prevent.
It is an advanced feature inexperienced users are unlikely to be aware of.
Those who do know the feature must (a) remember to use it and (b) may choose not to use it, so as not to be inundated with potentially unwanted, numerous notifications such as incidental post edits.
The notification is combined with cleanup of the comment.
Suggested implementation:
Provide a new flag - available to the post owner only - labeled something like this:
- "No longer needed. Also notify the commenter that their comment has been addressed in an update to the post."
The flag would act as follows:
As with current "No longer needed" flags, a moderator would have to agree in order to get the comment removed.
Irrespective of whether removal is approved, and assuming the commenter doesn't already follow the post, a notification is sent to the commenter using a canned message, something like:
- "You have posted a comment at
<clickable link>
, and the post owner has indicated that they have addressed the issue raised in you comment in an update to the post."
- "You have posted a comment at
To address feedback:
A recurring theme in the comments, re potential for abuse and unilateral notifications:
The proposed flag constitutes as much or as little potential for abuse as @-targeted reply comments already do - and to me such targeting is an invaluable part of the commenting system.
The new flag would simply streamlines the process and cut down on comment noise.
In other words: Via @-pinging, users already have the power to unilaterally notify others - this proposal doesn't introduce anything new. The discussion of whether unilateral notifications in general are worth having is an entirely separate debate.
If there's concern about the proposed new form of unilateral notification occurring behind the scenes, the notification aspect too could be made contingent on moderator approval.
Personally, I don't see the need for that, especially given that user do not control the content of the proposed notifications.
Someone abusing it to annoy another users could easily be addressed by raising the issue with moderators. Also note that this can happen at most once for a given comment a user has made.
Re making the flag available to others too, not just the post owner:
- I am open to that; my initial thought was it would only be of interest to post owners, but users who edit someone else's post may want to use it too.