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I am a little confused about this, maybe I just understood the system wrong.

A few days ago I came upon this question on SO: https://stackoverflow.com/q/26730424/1680196

Seeing that this is obviously out of scope for SO I decided to raise a flag, but found Off-Topic as not exactly fitting, as it was still somewhat related to programming, but in all the wrong ways.

Thus I went for Needs Moderator Attention, explaining in comment: Off-Topic: Requesting to crowdsource HR Q&A work

This flag was then declined, but the question subsequently put On-Hold.

I understand if this is caused by differentiating opinions between whoever declined my flag and whoever put the quesion on hold, but I somewhat expected declined flags to be automatically re-evaluated IF said question actually gets acted on.

Is this a common procedure? Or did I do something wrong?

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  • @psubsee2003 "Tool recommendation" does not feel appropriate for that question, and is not the close reason used by the community either. There is a "blatantly off-topic" reason avalable for flagging only (sadly not for closing), which should have been used here. BTW, I'm shocked that at least 5 people with >3K rep interacted with the question, but only one downvoted it (it's at -2 currently as I added a downvote) - this question is pretty much the definition of "not useful".
    – l4mpi
    Commented Nov 6, 2014 at 12:17
  • And yet it was put on hold for "opinion based" ...
    – kasoban
    Commented Nov 6, 2014 at 12:18
  • @l4mpi sorry... misread his "other" reason that he typed. You are of course correct Commented Nov 6, 2014 at 12:27
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    IMO, that question should have been migrated to meta, so we could give it the answer "No, using the SO voting system to evaluate interview submissions is not welcome".
    – Ben Voigt
    Commented Nov 6, 2014 at 14:16

1 Answer 1

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You asked a moderator to put the question on hold. The flag was declined because it doesn't take moderator intervention to close the question.

Just flag the question as blatantly off-topic, it was entirely out-side of the scope of the site, and leave it to the community to deal with it from there. This was not a question about a programming problem, this was a question about hiring, as well as being a polling question, so Too broad or Primarily opinion based would have fitted just fine too.

The question was put on hold by community vote here.

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  • Then shouldn't the flag process be a little more dynamic? I went this way because I remembered reading somewhere on Meta that you should go for other flag if you don't feel the standard flags sufficiently explain the issue.
    – kasoban
    Commented Nov 6, 2014 at 12:16
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    @kasoban: when voting to close (not flagging) there is a free-form option. That's not the same thing as the Other option when flagging. Commented Nov 6, 2014 at 12:17
  • @kasoban: when flagging, use the 'blatantly' option there, see Why do we not have an off-topic flag for closing as off-topic? Commented Nov 6, 2014 at 12:19
  • OK, will do that. Hijacking this for a somewhat related point I remembered when seeing that screenshot: What to choose if I think a question is out of scope for SO, but perfectly on point for another programming related StackExchange which isn't listed it the "belongs to another site in the network" option?
    – kasoban
    Commented Nov 6, 2014 at 12:23
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    @kasoban: then 'other' may be appropriate. Migration to sites not in the list is a moderator-only task. Commented Nov 6, 2014 at 12:24
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    @kasoban: also see Flagging migration should include more options Commented Nov 6, 2014 at 12:25
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    @kasoban - Regarding the migrations, it might be useful to read my answer here as well: meta.stackoverflow.com/a/275749/19679
    – Brad Larson Mod
    Commented Nov 6, 2014 at 14:10

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