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What does it mean when a flag is disputed? How is that different from being declined? I don't see a clear explanation for this in my flagging history, so just asking it here. Ironically, the first explanation I've seen was in the tag description for this post.

It seems like a surprisingly simple question not to be posted elsewhere on this meta. On that note, I think the explanation for each type of flag would be helpful information to add under "Your flagging history."

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    related: meta.stackexchange.com/a/212511/186381
    – Servy
    Commented May 1, 2014 at 15:21
  • it's two different scenarios. A flag disputed implies that, as Servy's link states - a mod disagrees with flag, and is leaving it hanging. Sometimes it just means the flag is obsolete or no-longer applicable(so just a neutral situation and flag is left alone). Flags declined are denied flags , a mod explicitly rejected flag... Commented May 1, 2014 at 15:21
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    @Coffee That's not a proper analysis of a disputed flag.
    – Servy
    Commented May 1, 2014 at 15:22
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    @Coffee Your edit is still wrong. Disputed flags are never touched by a moderator.
    – Servy
    Commented May 1, 2014 at 15:29

2 Answers 2

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From an answer on Meta Stack Exchange:

Helpful means a [Moderator] specifically marked the flag as helpful, or the action that you were suggesting through a flag was taken by the community.

Declined means that a [Moderator] specifically declined the flag.

Disputed basically means neither happened. A [Moderator] never actually looked at the flag and declined it, but the action you suggested wasn't taken in response to the flag either. This can happen in any number of cases; certain flags are marked disputed when the post is edited; non-moderator users can choose not to act on a flag (either through the 10k tools page (which has since been removed) or through certain review queues) which disputes a flag, etc...

While having declined flags is bad, having disputed flags is...less so. They're certainly not something to be as concerned about, because it usually means someone wasn't specifically evaluating your flag, but rather performing some related action that rendered your flag "moot" in some way.

Declined flags will "count against you", but disputed flags won't; it's more like you never submitted them in the first place...

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    I'd have guessed the words meant the opposite things -- Disputed that a Moderator said Nope! and Declined that the flag just gently faded away, as in "declining health". ...Too late to change now, though.
    – cphlewis
    Commented Apr 17, 2015 at 0:07
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    Where would declined flags "count against me"?
    – Gulzar
    Commented May 6, 2021 at 11:10
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Since a lot of questions are marked as a duplicate of this one and there is no explicit answer in this thread:

A flag raised during triage becomes disputed if the outcome of triage is not unsalvagable. In any case, even if the post is eventually deleted or closed, the flag stays disputed and will not turn helpful even if it was raised correctly during triage.

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    Quite a few questions about this topic - finally an answer that makes sense. Having spent some time "working the triage queue" recently, I've had the same thing happen several times. You flag something, say, a question, someone edits that question or eager people vote "should be improved", and the flag automatically gets set to "disputed"... before anyone actually gets around to looking at it. Later, sanity prevails, your flag is proven to be right, but it's too late and you look at your flags and wonder whether you're doing something wrong. This needs to be fixed, if you ask me. Commented May 7, 2015 at 8:13
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    @AmosM.Carpenter - Hear! Hear! How is it NOT helpful to flag a vague one-line answer, when the author gets around to editing into something useful days later? Is the message that "someone would have eventually noticed it was crap without you flagging it?" This is broken.
    – Mogsdad
    Commented May 7, 2015 at 13:36
  • I got my first disputed flag today when I flagged this question as 'unclear what you're asking.' Thanks for the explanation!
    – user4151918
    Commented May 31, 2015 at 6:59

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