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I almost asked a question very similar to How can I find out who declined my flag?, but I saw that Martijn Pieters ♦ commented that there's no way to do that.

That said, let me share my experience under that situation.

In my case I tried to flag this question because its answer is a duplicate, but in that time, the question had an opened bounty, so the system rejected my flagging.

Making a rapid search I've found a lot of meta questions about that situation and that the correct thing to do is flagging a moderator to handle the duplicated bounty (those example weren't the ones that I've read that day, but may serve as example: this question, and this another question - please, comment if you disagree with the action I've taken: maybe I should wait for the bounty to end and then vote to close).

Unfortunately, it happened that the bounty ended and after that the moderator declined my flag saying:

Please use standard close votes or close flags for this instead of flagging for moderators.

Yes, I understand what happened, and I see the motivation for declining the flag. Someway I thought that the moderator would see that I flagged that as a kind of last resort since I wasn't capable of handling it the standard community way on that moment, but this was my fault not to make it clear that the situation was in a bounty, after that I have already flagged it again, but with no success: the question isn't closed as a duplicate even the answerer explicitly saying that he found on another SO question. Well, that's the standard close handling. Let's deal with it.

Anyway, I just wanted to reply to the moderator who declined my flag that it wasn't my intent to add unnecessary work to moderation. I just felt I had to explain what happened.

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  • Well, did you explicitly mention the bounty? Because moderators don't see it while in the flag-queue... May 12, 2015 at 20:11
  • @Deduplicator Nope and that information would have been helpful in judging a flag.
    – Taryn
    May 12, 2015 at 20:11
  • @Deduplicator That's why I said but this was my fault not to make it clear that the situation was in a bounty
    – falsarella
    May 12, 2015 at 20:12
  • @falsarella Everyone gets declined flags, I wouldn't worry about it. Just keep in mind for future flags that you want to give a lot of details.
    – Taryn
    May 12, 2015 at 20:14
  • @Louis Thanks! I hadn't find that post. Very clarifying!
    – falsarella
    May 12, 2015 at 20:19
  • @bluefeet Good to hear that, thank you!
    – falsarella
    May 12, 2015 at 20:22

1 Answer 1

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I just felt I had to explain what happened.

You don't.

  • If you had a good reason for flagging that you failed to explain in your first flag, then flag again and do better at explaining yourself this time.
  • If you didn't have a good reason for flagging, then you just wasted a small amount of someone's time - so wasting more of their time by replying to the declined flag isn't an improvement; learn from it and move on.

Everyone makes mistakes. The flagging system is designed to minimize the cost of mistakes, since a whole lot of people can (and do) raise flags every day. Ideally, most of them learn something from declined flags and get better at it over time.

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