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replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/

There are (or were) heuristics in place for detecting bad answers. At the time they were implemented, new users were presented with a "how to answer" page if an answer ranked highly enough as a "thanks" non-answer. That hasn't stopped people from posting those. The low-quality-posts heuristic that automatically inserted posts in review has such a terrible false positive rate that I believe it should be removed or completely reworked.

That said, I'd love to have a more automated system for detecting non-answers. If you have a demonstrably reliable heuristic for determining non-answers, please do present it, along with evidence of its hits and false positives. The analysis is important here, because in all the schemes I've seen for finding non-answers to flag, none have been useful without human oversight. Simply asserting that "I don't think the false-positive rate would be high" isn't good enough, I want to see some statistics on this.

For example, the phrase "found the solution" is present in a ton of good answers. It's not inherently bad to state that you've found the solution, and what it is, and this really isn't the most common kind of non-answer I come across. You're far more likely to see someone trying to post a question in an answer or say thanks than that.

My gut feeling is that your proposal wouldn't hit a very large number of answers, and has the potential to have a troubling false positive rate if used to block posts or automatically flag them. I could be convinced otherwise with detailed statistics, though.

Brad Larson Mod
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