This change has been (mostly) rolled back.
From my related Meta Stack Exchange answer:
This was a matter of many people putting in a lot of effort to get some design elements in place while doing a bit of cleanup. We spent more time talking about it and have rolled it back to the previous text with a slight adjustment to the explanation:
It's no longer needed.
The comment is outdated, conversational or not relevant to this post.
So, what's changed:
- We had some feedback internally that "obsolete" is potentially unclear for some users, so we're going with "outdated" instead.
- "Conversational" replaces "chatty" - they are synonymous and the former is a bit more formal.
- "Otherwise unnecessary" is very broad and may lead to some confusion for moderators trying to address these flags. As such, we've focused on "not relevant", which combines more reasonably with the flag type and catches some comments that were likely never needed.
Making this text perfect is something that likely won't ever happen but we think this is a pretty good option. Keep in mind that the list needs to be short, so don't take it as exclusive. If the comment isn't needed any more - or was never needed - this is the right flag to use.
If there's a major block of comments that aren't being covered in one of the default reasons, the best option will be to use a custom flag (now called "something else") because it makes it much more obvious to us that such a flag reason is needed - we can analyze custom comment flags to see if there are common trends in the flag text.
Please excuse any confusion this has caused over the last week - it was very much unintentional.
As such, there's not much of a change here (any more).
The important thing to remember, regardless of what the flagging reasons are - the comment policy for the network hasn't changed. We're still encouraging you all to clean up the comments section of any content that doesn't need to be retained, whether that's a comment that's been addressed in an edit, a comment that was never needed in the first place, or a comment that is somehow rude or abusive.
Yes, it's important that our flag reasons make it easy for users to identify what comments are acceptable since many users don't read the help or privileges pages and we're endeavoring to keep this in mind. Thanks for your patience while we work out some kinks and please keep communicating with us when we err. Just as flags are an important part of moderation, knowing when we've taken a confusing turn helps us stay on track.