I've only been on SO since a few months, yet googling could not found a response about this on meta - feel free to downvote/close as duplicate is this is the case. I understand this may be a naive question.
As my experience here build up, I more and more often see a pattern, be it on questions I answer to or not:
OP post a question,
someone answer and solve the problem,
The OP answer in a comment "thanks, it worked!", yet he will not accept the answer, nor most of the time even flag is as "helpful" but instead ask another question in a comment, sometimes adding a funny lines such as "I except a response from you" - sic.
The problem I see with that: Legitimate questions and helpful responses which could be visible are burried forever. No good. This will not be useful to anybody except the OP.
How this should be handled?
(I could link to example of this, but I'm sure this is something any half-experienced SO user as come across that already)
(the OP may even accept the answer, an then un-accept it when you stop replying to their new questions hidden in comments - a kind of untold blackmail pattern)
(...and of course the script warning about long comments thread will not stop neither the help-vampire nor the re-whore if they're both desperate)
As for me, I've already decided my line of conduct: ignore.
Yet, this is both unpleasant and a waste of time for anyone but the OP. Plain noise. Though this may still be fair questions and valuable reponses that will be no good for anybody, since not noticeable / near to invisible.
This is an obvious help-vampire problem, from users that do not understand how SO works. Or, and this is very sad and very worse, pretend not to understanding how SO works, and hope they found a rep-whore that would do anything in endless comments to get the rep' from an accepted answer because they perfectly undestand the gamification of the system and its flawns.
So what to do / is done about such users and their questions?
PS:
...And now I after a few month experience here I perfectly understand why some scripts exist to block some users. There is a need for that, but how does SO want or should address this globally.