The reason for the change in review style isn't that these flags aren't visible to 10k users anymore, it's that these flags mostly aren't being handled by moderators. They're feeding into the Low Quality Posts review queue, where the decision to delete or not is being made by a group of reviewers. Despite people complaining for years that moderators didn't review these thoroughly enough, it turns out that the community is even more strict about these than we were.
"Not an answer" flags shouldn't need any further explanation. These flags should be used for anything that is obviously not an answer and that doesn't require any additional context to determine this. If you need to read the entirety of the question to determine that this doesn't belong, or should be a comment on something else, we recommend that you use an "other" flag and explain exactly why this answer needs to be deleted or converted to a comment.
If you're going to have to type out an explanation for a flag anyway, why not use an "other" flag? For many of these cases, you're flagging something that's better off as a comment, and only moderators have the ability to convert answers to comments.
To date, people have felt safe in revealing sensitive information in "other" flags because they knew that only moderators would see this information. If we expand this so that reviewers can also see this text for classes of flags, we'll need to make sure to caution people that anything they put in there will be publicly visible.
In regards to the recent flags that you've had disputed, I actually agree with the reviewers who disputed these two cases:
https://stackoverflow.com/review/low-quality-posts/4713873
https://stackoverflow.com/review/low-quality-posts/4702511
Both of those were indeed attempts to answer the question asked, and I see no reason that those answers should be deleted. One of them was removed by the poster after being downvoted, but it still was an answer even if you felt it was too opinionated. I think the review system worked well for those cases.