Almost a statement on something I read here not long ago on discussion of the Triage queue and the new "help and improvement" queue.
But I only recently just submitted a "flag" for "not an answer" on an answer that was given here.
It does seem a bit silly an ask, but the general point was at the time the flag was submitted the "answer" was most certainly not an answer. But at subsequent times and leading up to the final edit that seems in place now it does actually resemble an answer, if not entirely correct through its revision stages, but eventually resulting in a statement which mimics the answer I provided myself after the flag was raised.
I would generally think a great big "so what", with the exception that it does get noted that a certain number of "declined flags" within a period causes my account ( or anyone's account as the point ) to not be able to "flag" posts anymore.
So it seems kind of arbitrary, but is there a practice to consider the revision history in moderator decisions such as deeming the "flag" with a "declined" status or similar?
It's not a major crippling thing. I'm just trying to help and if that counts as a negative to me when the content has been corrected since then it seems a reverse of the logic for which the initial action was intended. If I get shut off from being able to do the same from further legitimate problems then so be it. But the original intent was sound.
Discussion tag added for sake of adding a tag, though it will probably burn me again. But a valid thing to consider or invalid? Which is essentially the ask here.
x
amount of flags get declined in a period ( doesn't seem to matter how many were accepted in contrast ) then you cannot submit any further flags until a period of time has passed. Much like an ill considered ban on activity, you're probably hurting more than benefiting by not considering the true context. Seems to be a big problem here.