I've never been completely happy with how we show these options in the flag dialog. For context, here they are (captured from here on Meta):
Someone with a trained UX eye can probably point out why I don't think they're optimal. They are, as you put it, nukes, and any context on how or when they should be used lives in a linked resource.
Folks aren't .. always the best at reading what's in front of them, much less a link that leads to entire paragraphs of stuff to read. Oh, the huge manatee!
The problem lies in the explanation; we've got a mere two sentences before we lose any meaningful grip on the shorter of attention spans. This problem becomes very interesting for 'spam', because there are instances where affiliation is properly disclosed and the post is put forth in good faith.
What if we made this a little closer to the dialog that moderators see when they decide if an account is in fact worthy of a brief sojourn into ballistic exercises?
What this would translate to in the flag dialog is:
spam
This is in no way an attempt to contribute a real, good-faith question or answer to the site; it's spam that discloses no affiliation and adds no value. This post should be removed from the site and the author should be subject to an administrative penalty, or possibly removed entirely.
rude or abusive
This post is written with the express intent of insulting, belittling or intimidating specific individuals or groups of people. It should be immediately removed from the site and the author should subject to an administrative penalty or possibly removed entirely.
I've considered it many, many times.
The problems are:
- Even with the clearer explanation, folks will continue to flag stuff that they simply don't like as spam or offensive. Though, it's pretty rare that enough flags follow to launch missiles. A case to keep in mind, not really worth optimizing for.
- Making the penalty clearer adds friction, I'm worried that we'll actually cut the (very) efficient manner that the real spam / troll fodder is cleared.
- I worry that we'll sweep up more folks that are actually making a good-faith attempt at answering (even if they end up doing it wrong). Oh, cool - that thing I just pushed to github would totally work for this person, I'll post a link to it. - That's not an uncommon or irrational process, keep in mind that our standards are way higher than most and not always obvious.
I'm open, I'm happy to explore ideas. Between Shog, Bluefeet, Jon and myself - we've probably put at least two months of person hours into figuring out how to present those options better.
I like the copy that I came up with because it seems really clear to me, but I can't ignore the fact that I'm quite biased after being here for as long as I have. I'm willing to test something different, but I want to set everyone's expectations; I'm not sure if there is a good combination of words to put there.