UPDATE: Dec 13, 2023 - Discussions flag reasons are now available.
This week, we are expanding the Discussions experiment to the R Language, CI/CD, and PHP Collectives. Moving beyond the initial launch in the NLP Collective allows for more participation across the different areas of practice. With a link to a Discussions home page (featuring Discussions in all collectives) soon being added to the left navigation, and through other discovery paths we’ll be exploring, we expect to see more participation in Discussions as time goes on.
More activity and content will bring added focus to the curation processes for this new type of content. The purpose of this post is to open up conversation about the norms and needs around curation, flagging, and content organization.
A fresh start with Discussions flags
Discussions is a new content type. When building out the initial experiment, we didn’t want to assume that the same flagging reasons and systems from Q&A should be applied. From both a social and technical perspective, there were strong reasons to take a fresh approach with flags and be guided by what we see.
The Q&A moderation dashboard and systems are complex; flags and their resolutions become part of user history, and can affect things down the road for those users. While utilizing the same conventions and tooling might have had advantages, we did not want to make users reluctant (or overzealous) to flag things in Discussions due to uncertainty about how those Q&A flag types apply to this new space. Making changes to the current systems (and the code that powers them) for Discussions might also have unintended effects on Q&A processes, and we did not want to disrupt those moderation flows or make life harder for the Stack Overflow moderation team.
Help us determine the right flag types
The “green field” approach and current bare-bones tooling have caused some concern, which is understandable. So let’s dive into some of the open questions and see what parameters and options we can define together. This ongoing conversation is concurrent with what we’ll observe as Discussions usage increases, and we’ll apply those learnings and the conversations here toward a solution that can meet community needs and help maintain content quality. The Discussions guidelines can also evolve accordingly.
Let’s imagine the modal that might appear when someone decides to flag a Discussions post. What flag reasons should be displayed as options for the flagging user to choose from? For each item below, I’ll pose some open questions (in bold) which are the things I hope we can discuss further in answers and comments.
Some options are clear-cut. We should have the following flags:
Spam
Rude/abusive behavior (largely inclusive of most Code of Conduct violations)
A free-form text field, to provide insight when there’s not a clear predefined reason. This can also provide a path for the clear-cut but possibly more rare scenarios like “no longer necessary, the parent reply is deleted” and help us determine if those are common needs. Proposed label: “Something else” (as seen on the comment flag modal)
Some other possible options for flag reasons may not be as clear-cut. Let’s talk about other scenarios that we’ve seen mentioned in user feedback already. As we look at these, let’s also remember that feedback about a Discussions post can also be provided in replies. Discussions is a conversation space, and it’s okay to let the author know how the post might be improved. That visible interaction may help others, in addition to the author, understand more about what makes a post high-quality.
This does not belong here – This could apply to both blatantly off-topic content as well as relevant posts that might be better suited for another location (like Meta, or another Stack Exchange site).
- What are some potential labels or “reasons” that would cover these scenarios? Or would this scenario be better handled with the free-form text field? This is also an area where we can explore automated solutions or migrations in the future.
Duplicates – It’s interesting to consider how this scenario might differ from Q&A. Some Discussions posts may feel similar to older, existing ones, but the ensuing conversation on each post can be very different depending on the wording of the post, recent changes in the area of practice, and the specific users that end up participating. Both the older and newer posts can have standalone value even if they are similar in some ways. Applying the same guidelines and processes that govern duplicates for Q&A may not be the best approach. This may be an area where conventions coalesce organically over time, or perhaps different collectives might take varying approaches to the issue based on the specific subject matter. Future additions such as sorting/filtering and search can also be helpful as the number of posts grows over time.
Should “duplicate content” be a pre-set flag reason, or does it make more sense for a potential flagging user to bring that up in a reply instead?
Does the free-form text field option cover things well enough here, allowing the flagging user to specify what is being duplicated?
What other reason options would you like to see appear on a flag modal for Discussions? As I said before, this will be an ongoing conversation and open for productive contributions for a long while.
See this answer below for a revised proposal for the Discussions flag reasons modal. Feedback can be provided in the comments on that answer.