In Summary
Which types of Stack Overflow content generate the largest counts of helpful flags? Do we have any (anonymized) statistics? Otherwise, what is the anecdotal evidence?
In Detail
The current election's main page mentions the volume of flags generated on SO:
Due to the size of Stack Overflow (averaging around 2,700 flags per day), moderation can be a significant responsibility...
It's only natural, therefore, that discussions about candidates mention flagging activities - for example:
89k helpful flags; 99.61% helpful
27000 flags
...and so on. To me, these are mind-boggling statistics.
Several discussions refer to users' bots, which may be performing the bulk of that flagging work - I don't know.
It seems that some users are able to raise tens/dozens/scores of useful flags per day - day after day, month after month. My own experience has been very different. I see some "not an answer" content and a small amount of rude & abusive content - but nothing in any great volumes.
Maybe that's a testament to the speed & effectiveness of the community, and the incredible dedication of our moderators. This is more impressive to me when I consider how flags can age away - which happened to most of my (admittedly very small volume of) old "flag to close" flags.
But even accounting for bots, what are all these flags? What is the type of content which is being usefully flagged so much? Are there any statistics on useful flags raised by flag type (but anonymized, of course)?
I looked at the schema on SEDE. I saw a FlagTypes
table containing: Question Recommend Close, Question Close, and Question Reopen as its 3 types. I understand why flagging data may be restricted due to its sensitive nature. So maybe the data I am looking for is not publicly accessible.
Reasons for asking:
I feel I must be looking directly at a lot of flaggable content, and just not seeing it. What am I missing?
Having a better understanding of this will probably also help me to avoid generating flaggable content myself...
For reference, assuming a user has the cast close and reopen votes privilege, here is a summary of the main flag types:
Question flags:
- spam
- rude or abusive
- needs improvement
- a duplicate
- very low quality
- in need of moderator intervention (with specific reason)
Answer flags:
- spam
- rude or abusive
- not an answer
- in need of moderator intervention (with specific reason)
Comment flags:
- contains harassment, bigotry, or abuse
- unfriendly or unkind
- no longer needed (outdated, conversational or not relevant)
- something else (with specific reason)
Resources I found:
What does the helpful flag mean?
What are the “spam” and “rude or abusive” (offensive) flags, and how do they work?
When should comments be deleted?
What are valid reasons for flagging comments?
What can I use 100 flags for each day?
I also found some posts discussing users with high flag counts, and strategies for increasing one's flag counts - but those are not really the purpose of this question:
Who raised the most helpful flags on Stack Overflow and Meta?
How did this user raise 5,000 helpful flags in only 52 days?
I don't think there is any way I could ever be able to generate flags (or reviews, or votes, for that matter) in these quantities and at these speeds, and still be accurate enough to be doing good work.