Coming from this question (which I brought up because I thought a moderator had declined my flag, but was apparently declined by fellow reviewers) I've been trying to find where is it documented what the flag resolution means and how to determine how exactly did it come about.
I've seen a few questions about it:
- Declined and disputed flags
- What is the difference between declined, disputed and aged away?
- Disputed vs. helpful/declined flags (the alleged dupe, but which claims that declined flags are so because a diamond mod declined them, and that is not the case here)
- https://meta.stackexchange.com/a/212511/348149
(etc)
But in all cases the conclusion seem to be the same:
- Disputed come from community
- Declined come from a diamond moderator.
Which at first glance seems to contradict what happened here:
Flag resolution shows as "declined", albeit apparently the rejection came up on review with votes to close according to the post timeline which contradict the details in this meta.se answer found by @Sebastian-proske:
if the review is completed without any user casting a close vote the flag is declined
And the relevant page in the help-center doesn't say anything about this, at least that I could find.
More digging up by @Tensibai brought up this (Declined unclear-flag, later post put on hold as offtopic), and a comment on it by Brad Larson that says that:
it was declined by the system after three reviewers voted to leave that question open
Which doesn't change the core of this question: Can we have an updated explanation on what flag resolution messages means today?
Even in the case nothing changed, finding the exact meaning for this messages seems to be a little harder than it should. Maybe we can put all the information in the same place for future reference?