One of the themes that comes up here from time to time is moderator workload, and a simple idea occurs to me that might reduce some hum-drum work required of moderators.
My guess is that flaggers will use the "no longer needed" flag much more than others, since there is a lot of fluff commentary on the site. There is already an algorithm that will auto-delete a comment if it attracts several of these, and (I suspect) if it is short and contains thanks.
I suggest that when a good flagger raises this flag, we look at their stats, and if their helpfulness rate is more than, say, 99%, we do this:
- Flip a coin to decide if the comment will be hidden immediately (and the deletion is marked as neither helpful nor unhelpful)
- If it is not, it goes to a moderator in the usual way (and is marked as helpful/unhelpful as usual)
The purpose of the coin flip is thus. We could allow good flaggers the power to delete fluff every time, but this would have two problems:
- there would be no ongoing measure of their helpfulness, which could go downhill when users are given this power
- it might be open to creeping abuse, e.g. deleting someone's remarks in frustration while debating a point
The levels we set the parameters at would be open to tuning, of course. Maybe the floor of helpfulness needs to be set at 98% with a minimum of 1000 helpful comment flags, for example. Or perhaps a user needs to have a particular badge.
The randomness that selects immediate hiding or ordinary moderator action could start at 0.5/0.5, and be tuned from there.
If this idea is of interest, I guess we'd need to start by examining some data. For anyone with access to the raw numbers of moderator stats, do you feel this could make a useful dent in moderator workload? I understand that this sort of flag is the quickest to handle, but perhaps moderator time would be better spent on more complex tasks like voting rings?
Notes
Related reading: How has the "No longer needed" comment flag affected moderators?
:-)
.