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So I encountered this comment during an audit:

This is spam and this comment kills the grace period.

The question was obvious spam, and the word "spam" was in the link in plain sight.

What does the rest of it mean? Is this a "canned comment"? I may have seen similar, if not identical, comments during previous audits.

Nothing was coming up when I did a meta search for the phrase.

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1 Answer 1

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Some folks are concerned that a spammer might edit out his spam during the 5-minute editing "grace period" after the post's creation, thus ensuring that it wouldn't appear as spam to future viewers (including moderators) who might thus decline any pending spam flags.

Posting a comment locks in the current revision, ensuring that further edits create a new revision and make it harder for such a clever spammer to cover his tracks.

I'm... Not entirely sure this has actually happened, but I suppose it does no harm.

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  • 4
    Starting from here: chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/29403867#29403867 is a conversation I had with a few folks in chat about this. One example was pointed out, but that was the first time I'd ever seen that.
    – Brad Larson Mod
    Apr 21, 2016 at 2:11
  • 15
    Yeah... That was someone jacking around; more trolling than spam, which makes sense. Heh, I guess it's a successful troll if it motivates folks to post these comments forever after. Anyway, the ones I'm more familiar with are the "submarine" spammers who go back and edit their posts a week or so later to add the spam, hoping it won't get noticed.
    – Shog9
    Apr 21, 2016 at 2:20
  • I see comments like the one Laurel posted all the time in the various review queues on SO, on audits.
    – Luke
    Apr 21, 2016 at 6:39
  • @luke good observation, but in your opinion is that an example of doing harm? Or actually the opposite?
    – Gimby
    Apr 21, 2016 at 8:06
  • @Gimby Well as the comments tend to appear on audits - then what's the point of audits? I guess people still have to read the comment(s) on the audit to discover that it's an audit! (if it's not obvious enough already)
    – Luke
    Apr 21, 2016 at 8:38
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    @luke in my understanding the main purpose is to catch robo reviewers or people who are on their way becoming one. In my opinion the comment actually helps to prove that; if you don't see something that obvious, you were reviewing with your eyes closed :)
    – Gimby
    Apr 21, 2016 at 11:41
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    @Gimby The term "robo reviewer" is unfair. I could easily make a robot that could recognize this obvious spam. They are more like zombie reviewers.
    – Laurel
    Apr 21, 2016 at 17:46
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    It actually happened again today. It was not spam but a troll who posted gibberish and then edit his answer with plagiarism of another answer. Without the comment the revision would not have been captured: stackoverflow.com/a/36769359/4342498 Apr 21, 2016 at 18:06
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    Maybe the solution is for flags to kill the grace period
    – Flexo Mod
    Apr 21, 2016 at 18:10
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    @Flexo That has been requested: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/307402/… and meta.stackexchange.com/questions/274059/… Apr 21, 2016 at 18:11
  • The big problem with that is that it's opaque behavior, @flexo. Only the flagger or moderators know what's happening; to anyone else, it'd just look broken.
    – Shog9
    Apr 21, 2016 at 18:37
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    @Shog9 I don't know how feasible it would be or if we should but to make it more apparent couldn't the flag button get a counter the the close link does? It doesn't need to expose what flags were cast but if it showed a number then people would know that it was flagged. Apr 21, 2016 at 19:27
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    @Shog9 I'm not sure what's worse: people posting extraneous comments to kill the grace period or the occasional Meta question asking why the grace period ended early. The latter does have the advantage that the first question could become the target of dupe votes later on, and I suspect those questions would be fairly rare. You'd have to know about the grace period in the first place to even ask, and you would have to have failed at finding the first one (and ignoring it if suggested while you wrote your question).
    – jpmc26
    Apr 22, 2016 at 0:24
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    @jpmc26 I find it unlikely that posts worthy of spam/abusive flags have authors who ask on meta about the grace period. And for the very few false positive flags: exceptionally unlikely that OP would edit and miss the grace period. Apr 23, 2016 at 11:05
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    @AndrasDeak It would be more likely that someone flagging it or close voting it would. Which of course raises the question of whether close/delete votes should do the same. Also, something else to realize: people are posting meta questions asking about the comments placed to kill the grace period, so we kind of have extra meta questions and extraneous comments with the way it works now.
    – jpmc26
    Apr 24, 2016 at 5:48

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