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I've seen a few questions like these:

I used to flag them as off-topic, as I feel they belong to Super User/Server Fault, but most of my flags ended up as disputed. Am I overlooking an obvious direct relation to programming / software development here?

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  • 'Flags' are direct signals to moderators, who have to decide on a case-by-case what to do with it. With just a little more reputation, you can vote to close for exactly that same reason, and then it's just a case of finding 4 like-minded close voters. (I don't know why low rep users need to use flags for this.)
    – Jongware
    Aug 15, 2016 at 12:06
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    @RadLexus: should be closed and duplicate flags do not reach moderators. Instead, they route posts into a review queue. All other types of flags though, as you said, do go through to a moderator (and sometimes into a queue as well, depending on the type of flag, and state (vote count etc.) of the post).
    – Matt
    Aug 15, 2016 at 12:13

1 Answer 1

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The first two are 100% off-topic. They have nothing to do with programming and do not belong here. Flagging for closure is correct.

The third might be programming-related, but it too deserves to be closed - it's talking about a problem without bothering to detail the exact steps taken to trigger it, or listing the actual errors received.

Your flagging is fine. The reviewers that are disputing the flags (which doesn't count against you - only diamond-mod declines do) are wrong.

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    Just out of curiosity, is there a penalty when moderator declines a flag?
    – Alon Eitan
    Aug 15, 2016 at 12:45
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    @AlonEitan If it happens too often to you in a time-window, you temporarily cannot flag anything anymore. Aug 15, 2016 at 13:00
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    So I guess people explicitly commenting "I'm voting to close this because (...)" do so not to educate the author, but rather to give a clue to reviewers who would otherwise skim the question and think "it's clear and all the information is in place, looks OK". Maybe I should do that too.
    – rafalmp
    Aug 15, 2016 at 16:24
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    @rafalmp I think these comments are auto-generated by 3k users when they use a custom close reason (source: meta.stackexchange.com/q/184154/224130 - Free-form reasons will be presented as comments, but the close dialogue will refer the reader to the comments for more info). But I'm not saying you shouldn't post these by hand.
    – Petr R.
    Aug 15, 2016 at 17:14
  • @rafalmp Those messages (especially custom ones) serve both to clue in other reviewers/voters and to help educate the OP on why their question is off-topic.
    – TylerH
    Aug 16, 2016 at 13:12

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