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Recently I've seen Community comments like

Please provide enough code so others can better understand or reproduce the problem.

Overall, I like it, it's good! But sometimes the community user puts them on a question where they're not really relevant.

This question, for example, is essentially a typo, the asker was trying to combine the first to arguments of a function into one argument. I commented with the correct syntax, and voted to close the question as a typo. The asker thanked me in another comment. Then the Community comment popped up. I tried flagging it, but even though I have over 100k rep and a gold badge in one of the question's tags, I just get a message that

This comment will be automatically removed by the system when the post is corrected.

Is there any way to help the system learn when these comments aren't useful?

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    “Community“ comments are picked by users on review. You seem to think these comments are chosen by some sort of AI. That’s not the case. You can’t “help the system learn”. There are human users evaluating these posts and using the “share feedback” button.
    – yivi
    Commented Sep 1, 2021 at 0:42
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    What community AI? Every single one of those comments is generated because a human made resulting selection indicating the question needed more detail. If a question was caused by a typo it should be closed. Unfortunately, the list of reasons, that generate the community is limited. So reviewers deal with what we have, which is a shame, since it’s brand new. Commented Sep 1, 2021 at 2:12
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    Welcome to the most recent update to review queues, I guess. Behind each of those comments is a real user (although they won't know if you replied unless they followed the post) + the inability to flag those is literally a bug. The comments are also canned and, frankly, not well-worded (they could've at least looked at what users of the legendary ARC userscript use, but alas), so your frustration is more than understandsble.
    – 0Valt
    Commented Sep 1, 2021 at 5:11
  • I suspect that a fair bit of it may be related to review "credit". Unless I'm missing something, in order to get "credit" for a review, a reviewer must select "Looks OK", "Edit", or "Share Feedback", and the options under Share Feedback may not be the most appropriate for the circumstance. Since flags and "traditional" comments don't count for reviews made, I'm guessing a lot of reviewers are shoehorning feedback to get the review credit.
    – DaveL17
    Commented Sep 1, 2021 at 12:18
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    Imagine how weird code-related comments are on sites like English Language & Usage... meta.stackexchange.com/a/369111/334566
    – PM 2Ring
    Commented Sep 1, 2021 at 13:08
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    I'm voting to reopen this question because the linked duplicate does not address the question of How can I provide feedback on said comments.
    – Ryan M Mod
    Commented Sep 2, 2021 at 6:03

1 Answer 1

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First, as noted in the comments, these are selected by humans in the First questions review queue. So any case where they're incorrect is an incorrect review by a human. With that in mind:

If it's not egregiously bad, you should probably just flag the comment, either as "No longer needed" or with a custom flag explaining why it's wrong (such as the fact that you were able to diagnose the typo here). Note: this is currently not possible (and moderators cannot delete the comments even if you flag the post separately), but these issues will be fixed Soon™ and this advice will become accurate.

If it's egregiously wrong or you notice a pattern of bad reviews by the same person (you can check the post's timeline to see the reviewer), you can flag the post itself for moderator attention and note that the review(s) was/were incorrect. See here for more advice on when to flag bad reviews.

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