A user uses the following strategy: when they open a new question, they go to an answer of mine (which is possibly totally unrelated to the question) and uses a comment to ask me to take a look at their question. Comments are not intended to such a practice. What should I do? Should I flag this comment?
2 Answers
Flag them as:
It's no longer needed.
This comment is outdated, conversational or not relevant to this post.
The comment will then be deleted by a moderator.
As for what you do after, it's up to you; you can go and answer their question or ignore it. I, personally, tend to do the latter as I choose what questions I answer, not others. That isn't to say that if I find their question via another method (such as in one of my custom filters) I'll ignore it, just that I'll ignore the comment from the user.
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3You need to do more than that. You need to bring the overall pattern of abuse to a moderator's attention, using a custom flag on a post.– Cody Gray ModCommented Dec 9, 2020 at 17:58
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1Though true, the impression I got from the OP was that this is a one off, not persistent.– Thom ACommented Dec 9, 2020 at 20:01
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3Oh, I interpreted as very much the opposite of a one-off. Fair enough, though. If it's truly a one-off, there's no need to do anything more than flagging the individual comment for removal.– Cody Gray ModCommented Dec 9, 2020 at 23:10
This is plain and simple harassment - Stack Overflow does not exist to be an on-demand helpdesk. Immediately flag such comments for moderation attention with an appropriate explanation.
If the user is smart and/or just wasn't aware of the rules (reminder: not an excuse, it's their duty to know those), they will desist after the mods have a word with them. If they are a classic help vampire (i.e. the opposite of smart), they will continue, at which point you modflag again, and this time the mods will hopefully be a little more... persuasive.
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Related: stackoverflow.com/questions/123
can be a useful comment because now those related questions are linked in the "Related" sidebar.