I hope I don't upset anyone with this question, but I had a question which got some good answers and it was helpful both to me and other people. The thing was it was similar but with some slight differences with another question already posted so after a few days it got deleted. It was my first question asked.

The problem was that my account was also deleted with the question and I had to create a new account associated with my gmail account as if I never had one before. How was this possible?

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Sounds unusual. Do you still have a link or a user name handy? – Pekka 웃 Oct 31 '11 at 7:53
I only have the link for the question delete: stackoverflow.com/questions/7794431/private-app-update-version/… It still doesn't explain why I had to go to the create user process twice and also losing my info associated with the first account(contact info,activity on stackoverflow etc) – Fofole Oct 31 '11 at 9:05
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Did you happen to post spam, or something people might have reported as spam? Many spam reports might explain why your account has been nuked like that. – Sha Wiz Dow Ard Oct 31 '11 at 9:19
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I think @ShadowWizard might be on to the reason here. The post just says "deleted Oct 19 at 19:42". If it has been deleted by users/moderators it would give their names. Though spam posts usually list "Community" as the deleting user... – ChrisF Oct 31 '11 at 9:23
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@Chris I think that mods or devs have "Prune" button that cause all the posts of the victim account (usually heavy spammer) to be automatically deleted in addition to deleting the account itself. As it's part of "mass deletion", there is nobody associated with the action of deleting each post. Interesting why this happened though and what he could have posted to trigger such harsh response. For the record, I moderate some forum and know this Prune action from there and users banned this way appear to be banned by "Spam Killer 3000". LOL – Sha Wiz Dow Ard Oct 31 '11 at 9:28
well, either the case don't you think I should have got at least a message on my gmail account saying something like "Your account was deleted because you posted a spam question" or any kind of message. (it wasn't a spam question and as stated before it helped other people not just me, but just for the sake of argument ..) And it was my first question ever on stackoverflor so I don't think I was flagged as "heavy spammer" – Fofole Oct 31 '11 at 9:28
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Fofole - so the only thing I can think of is that somebody else posted lots of spam from the same computer or the same IP you were using. Any chance you're using shared computer? – Sha Wiz Dow Ard Oct 31 '11 at 9:31
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@ShadowWizard - Of course - I forgot about that. Yes, if all the questions on the account were deemed to be spam then a mod could have destroyed the account which will probably give the results seen. – ChrisF Oct 31 '11 at 9:31
This is a work computer. But it is not shared, and no one else has acces to it. Well, no big harm was done, but I wouldn't like this to happen again as I want to contribute to the community from now on and that would be hard if I would get my account deleted again for no reason and then begin to gain reputation from 1. – Fofole Oct 31 '11 at 9:33
Maybe other machines in your work place share the same IP and someone post spam - in such case it can happen again, I would email the team and explain the situation to them.. – Sha Wiz Dow Ard Oct 31 '11 at 9:38
Just checked and I don't share IP with anyone. – Fofole Oct 31 '11 at 10:04
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p.s., I think notifying the user of a deleted account due to spam is a horrible idea. That will give spammers all the reason to come back and try again under a different identity (since they know it was cleaned up). – Jeff Mercado Oct 31 '11 at 10:25
How did you check you don't share the IP? Anyhow, until moderator comes by and check this in depth we can't really know. – Sha Wiz Dow Ard Oct 31 '11 at 10:46
@Fofole Internally to your company network you may not have the same IP's, but most companies uses a single router or proxy to connect to the internet, which has only one IP, and will in effect mean your IP as far the internet is concerned is shared. – Diago Oct 31 '11 at 11:13
I understand. So the only solution would be to find the "heavy spammer" from my workgroup? Well this surprises me as this is a professional company with mostly senior software developers and I find it hard to believe this is the case . However, what if I would post my questions from my home PC but with the same account? The spam test is done on the IP from which I put the question or from the IP I created my account? Just curious how this actually works. – Fofole Oct 31 '11 at 11:22
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