We found score hard to understand. It is still there behind the scenes
for sorting purposes, but it is no longer shown.
You can now filter by minimum priority (low, med, high) instead of
score.
Includes support for flags, reviewable users and queued posts, with REST API
backwards compatibility.
Co-Authored-By: romanrizzi <romanalejandro@gmail.com>
Co-Authored-By: jjaffeux <j.jaffeux@gmail.com>
Before this patch, a high trust level user could flag something
and have an action be taken, as well as skipping the flag queue.
Now, if a TL3/TL4 cause an action, the flag will skip the minimum
visibility check and allow staff to review it.
On sites with many flages, it could take quite a long time for
ActiveRecord to return all the joined data.
It's now 3 queries instead of one, but significantly faster, especially
if you have a minimum threshold set.
You can now call `whitelist_flag_post_custom_field` from your plugins
and those custom fields will be available on the flagged posts
area of the admin section.
All flags should end up in one of the three dispositions
- Agree
- Disagree
- Defer
In the administration area, the *active* flags section displays 4 buttons
- Agree (hide post + send PM)
- Disagree
- Defer
- Delete
Clicking "Delete" will open a modal that offer to
- Delete Post & Defer Flags
- Delete Post & Agree with Flags
- Delete Spammer (if available)
When the flag has a list associated, the list will now display 1
response and 1 reply and a "show more..." link if there are more in the
conversation. Replying to the conversation will NOT give a disposition.
Moderators must click the buttons that does that.
If someone clicks one buttons, this will add a default moderator message
from that moderator saying what happened.
The *old* flags section now displays the proper dispositions and is
super duper fast (no more N+9999 queries).
FIX: the old list includes deleted topics
FIX: the lists now properly display the topic states (deleted, closed,
archived, hidden, PM)
FIX: flagging a topic that you've already flagged the first post