@Cow That pattern may be a North American number. If it is, please use a format which starts with an optional 1 followed by possible separator text and has the main number in the format 912-542-0150 where - could be a single alpha character or any [\W_]*+. Alternately, you can add the comment (?#IS NorAm) to the end of the pattern to force also using the alternate normalized form, or (?#NO NorAm) if it's not a North American phone number and it's incorrectly recognized as one. Perhaps try !!/blacklist-number 912-542-0150. Append -force to the command word(s) if you really want to add the pattern you provided.
@Cow That pattern may be a North American number. If it is, please use a format which starts with an optional 1 followed by possible separator text and has the main number in the format 789-467-3552 where - could be a single alpha character or any [\W_]*+. Alternately, you can add the comment (?#IS NorAm) to the end of the pattern to force also using the alternate normalized form, or (?#NO NorAm) if it's not a North American phone number and it's incorrectly recognized as one. Perhaps try !!/blacklist-number 789-467-3552. Append -force to the command word(s) if you really want to add the pattern you provided.
@Dragonrage That pattern may be a North American number. If it is, please use a format which starts with an optional 1 followed by possible separator text and has the main number in the format 789-467-3552 where - could be a single alpha character or any [\W_]*+. Alternately, you can add the comment (?#IS NorAm) to the end of the pattern to force also using the alternate normalized form, or (?#NO NorAm) if it's not a North American phone number and it's incorrectly recognized as one. Perhaps try !!/blacklist-number 789-467-3552. Append -force to the command word(s) if you really want to add the pattern you provided.
@Cow That pattern may be a North American number. If it is, please use a format which starts with an optional 1 followed by possible separator text and has the main number in the format 829-988-4347 where - could be a single alpha character or any [\W_]*+. Alternately, you can add the comment (?#IS NorAm) to the end of the pattern to force also using the alternate normalized form, or (?#NO NorAm) if it's not a North American phone number and it's incorrectly recognized as one. Perhaps try !!/blacklist-number 829-988-4347. Append -force to the command word(s) if you really want to add the pattern you provided.
@Cow On some sites, we used to have spam flags expire from time to time. Fortunately, SE changed it a while back so that spam and R/A flags no longer expire.
@Anerdw That pattern looks like it's already caught by Potentially bad keyword in answer and Potentially bad keyword in body Append -force to the command word(s) if you really want to add the pattern you provided.
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Bad keyword in body, bad keyword in link text in body, pattern-matching website in body, potentially bad ns for domain in body, potentially bad keyword in body (265): Writing in Nursing Education by Adam on mathoverflow.net
@Cow If it's not possible for there to be a match without the "s", when the "s" exists, such as will commonly be the case with watch and blacklist entries, then possessive is going to be faster, as there will be no backtracking to characters where a match isn't possible. Our typically using possessive in many of our quantifiers is because we know when writing the regex that it's not possible for it to match if the quantified thing was backtracked over individual characters (e.g., a [\W_]*+ followed by a required character that's in [A-Za-z\d]). We're generally using possessiveness because we know that backtracking through something would be wasted computational effort, regardless of the input text. One does have to be careful, though, in the use of possessiveness, as it's possible to end up unintentionally excluding some matches when possessiveness is used in a case where backtracking might produce a match.
@Cow That pattern may be a North American number. If it is, please use a format which starts with an optional 1 followed by possible separator text and has the main number in the format 690-967-7678 where - could be a single alpha character or any [\W_]*+. Alternately, you can add the comment (?#IS NorAm) to the end of the pattern to force also using the alternate normalized form, or (?#NO NorAm) if it's not a North American phone number and it's incorrectly recognized as one. Perhaps try !!/blacklist-number 690-967-7678. Append -force to the command word(s) if you really want to add the pattern you provided.
@Cow That pattern looks like it's already caught by Potentially bad keyword in answer and Potentially bad keyword in body Append -force to the command word(s) if you really want to add the pattern you provided.