In a recent meta Q&A @TylerH noted that comments are "transient" and "second-class citizens", and that is often true, but not always. For example, there are many comments along the lines of "thanks" or "please accept my answer" and clearly those are useful for a day or two at most.
Conversely, some comments are clearly not transient in nature nor should they be considered second-class. The obvious example is when answers are disguised as comments, and sometimes have significant upvotes, but there are also lots of in-between comments that clearly have long term usefulness, yet are more appropriate as comments. These in-between comments get some protection in that you need 3 flags or a moderator to delete them, but the lack of visibility into this process by anyone except a moderator nonetheless makes it very opaque in the event that something useful is deleted.
Feature request: Allow both users and moderators to put a self-delete timer on comments. For example, the classic "Please accept my answer if it helped you" can be nice reminder to a new user, but clearly should not exist for more than a day or two. This could perhaps be setup so that lower rep users default to comments that self-delete after 24 hours, but higher rep users defualt to permanent comments.
As a corrollary to this, perhaps this might also allow the more permanent-type comments to have better transparency in the case of deletion. Again, it might be connected to user rep level.
Benefits:
Provide moderators a middle ground for dealing with flagged comments. We can perhaps agree that the usefulness of many comments is genuinely debatable -- especially to a moderator without specific tag knowledge. With an immediate deletion, no one can possibly benefit from the comment. But with a delayed deletion via timer, it ensures that the comment generates no long term clutter, yet many more users get a chance to see the comment, in the event it is useful.
General reduction of clutter for cases where someone intends to come back and delete a comment but forgets.