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First of all, I understand that flag weight is not like reputation, and in the grand scheme of things, you can participate perfectly well in the community regardless of your flag weight, but theres something that's been itching me for a while now with the way flags are sometimes handled.

See How to know if an app runs for the first time on device? on Stack Overflow. It is clearly a duplicate of Check if application is on its first run. It is so clearly a duplicate that the accepted answers are exactly the same, albeit with vastly differing amounts of detail. I flagged the latest one as a duplicate but the flag was declined and the question is still open.

Now, see How does Stack Overflow create its question URLs? I flagged as off-topic to be migrated to meta (admittedly, maybe a little premature) and the flag was declined, but the question was later migrated to meta anyway.

I flagged an answer for Android Facebook API errors with SSO when Facebook App installed as not an answer, which was declined and then the answer was deleted.

I think we need to consider a better way of handling flagged questions or answers in situations like this.

I'm usually an enthusiastic flagger, and if I make a bad call (like the flag to migrate I mentioned above), then I'm happy to take a hit to my flag weight but when my flags are declined, and then later the post is flagged by other users and acted on by mods for the exact same reason, it's a bit of a kick in the teeth when you are actively trying to improve the site and are losing flag weight when you are subsequently proven correct.

I know the arguments for leaving the system as it is, but the fact is that flag weight is used to determine how prominent flags are in the moderator's queue and therefore have a direct, tangible impact on the quality of the site as a whole.

I'm not asking for flag weight to be awarded for flags that are subsequently approved (though that would be nice, especially when identical flags from other users are deemed valid/helpful), but can we at least treat them as disputed and remove the flag weight penalty when the same flag by different users is deemed helpful?

I also understand that this is a relative edge-case, but considering the potential good you can do with flagging it seems to me that these edge cases cost the community enough in terms of quality of questions and answers that a relatively narrowly defined "flag recalc" to remove a "bad" flag penalty would help improve flagging (and therefore directly improve the overall quality of the site) overall.

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    Don't forget that mods are a) volunteers and b) human. Mistakes will be made. This is one reason why I'm against the flag weight being shown. Without that information you'd happily flag stuff regardless of how it's handled.
    – ChrisF Mod
    Sep 1, 2011 at 16:37
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    But who will mod the mods?
    – Flexo
    Sep 1, 2011 at 16:43
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    You have successfully determined that moderators are human. In fact, if we weren't, I would have closed this question as an exact duplicate of quite a number of similar questions here (which I am unable to locate at the moment, because I am human).
    – user1228
    Sep 1, 2011 at 16:53
  • This answer that you flagged was not deleted. Sep 1, 2011 at 16:58

2 Answers 2

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...and then later the post is flagged by other users and acted on by mods for the exact same reason...

That's not what happened. Your flag on How does Stack Overflow create its question URLs? was dismissed by a moderator, then later migrated by the community after a question about it was posted here on meta. I wouldn't say you were "proven correct," but that your opinion turned out to be in the majority.

The edge cases are a tiny minority of flags we process. Flag weight is supposed to teach you what to flag and what to leave alone. If you're getting a lot of flags dismissed as not helpful then you need to adjust the way you're flagging.

but the fact is that flag weight is used to determine how prominent flags are in the moderator's queue and therefore have a direct, tangible impact on the quality of the site as a whole.

What is the "direct, tangible impact"? That your flags get processed a few minutes before someone else's? We want posts that need immediate attention to be at the top of the queue, not borderline edge cases.

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My issue seems to be addressed here so accepting my own answer for the benefit of future viewers.

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