We're working on this, mostly by first seeing what we can get out of tweaking what feeds the helper queue, which is triage. To that, the first thing we realized we needed to look at was what was feeding triage, because that determines the sampling of posts that establishes a baseline for could be improved (implied by should) and total junk.
The selection process for triage has a few basic components:
- A machine-learning (ML) system that has been trained on known good / known bad (and a lot of it)
- Signal we capture from very new accounts where we don't have much history to go on
- A selection / scoring process based on your recent question history once you do have some history
The second item is what was lacking. The ML system comes up with two scores, a 'goodness' score and a 'badness' score. In way too many cases, these scores were just too close together in order to be meaningful - a pattern that we almost always saw with very new accounts. A lot of stuff wasn't going straight to triage that should have. We now watch, very carefully, what visitors from any given network do while posting. If someone originating from where you are couldn't even get a question to post despite trying to submit it five times, there's a very good chance that your question could benefit from at least a cursory glance by a reviewer. There's now about 15 different things that we trap and keep track of.
We're also vastly improving the flag dialog to make it less painful. While we wanted some friction in place for folks to say 'unsalvageable', what we had wasn't just too much; it was just a mess that we ignored for way too long.
I don't want to put another 'eject' button in the helper queue until and if we're absolutely positive that we have the triage and helper queues working together as best as they possibly can. Right now, you have the 'very low quality' link; use that when you see stuff that's just unsalvageable.
But it's not 'very low quality', it's just missing critical information
Don't worry about it, it'll just age out of the queue. If there's not already a comment letting the author know what's needed - add one, and move on.
Wait, that sounds like you agree that 'abandoned' questions are clutter?
Yes, and (if it comes to that), the next 'eject' button is going to be 'question is abandoned' which would kick it right to the close queue. At least 80% of the stuff I'd personally skip in the queue comes in the form of a question that can't be answered unless its author adds more detail. No amount of editing is going to help that, and they're nowhere to be found.
This would (conceivably) be set up to automatically add your close vote for 'unclear' as it leaves the helper queue and moves on to the close queue, but it wouldn't be available unless the post had been in the queue for a while. I don't know, I'm just thinking out loud.
I have to look at it some more. My point is (and I did have one before I got so horribly winded here) that it's not just a matter of adding more moderation tools in the queue if we really want to get this right. Adding them at this point would just obfuscate what's wrong, and I don't want to do that.
But, I do hear you, and we're working on it. We haven't lost reason or sensibility; it's just a more complicated problem than some might realize.