Having looked at the proposal in the original post and the amount of the negative feedback that it received, I thought that this feature has no chance of survival. Hence, I decided not to invest my time to provide feedback. However, I became worried after reading the outline of this question. In summary, my feedback is: > **Less is more** --- - The feedback from the meta-community is negative, almost without exceptions. At the time of writing, the vote on the original post is 1162/141. That is, roughly 89% of the meta-community is against the introduction of this feature. Why would one wish to acquire further evidence to prove that this feature is not a useful contribution? - As I understand it, the primary issue that the feature is trying to address is the "Thank you" comments that are, occasionally, left by users who are not familiar with all of the policies of the website. I can hardly imagine why this issue has such a high priority. Leaving a "thank you" comment is a very minor violation in comparison to, for example, posting a low-quality question or a low-quality answer. It seems like this feature attempts to fix something that is even not broken. - It is, obviously, *questionable whether or not this feature will solve the problem that it is trying to address*. This requires data acquisition, data analysis, and some subjective judgment. This will require a certain amount of effort that is best expended on more important problems. - It is very likely that *this feature will have a negative impact on other aspects of this website* (even if it will achieve the desired goal of reducing the number of "Thank you" comments). It will make the interface more cluttered, complicated, and confusing than it is at the moment. It is likely to reduce the number of upvotes on good answers, making it even harder for new competent users to gain reputation. - Given all of the negative feedback that this feature received, it is very likely that it will have long-lasting negative impact on the (already shattered) relationship between the meta-community and the company.