Unfortunately we often see questions about live programming competitions on Stack Overflow. Of course Stack Overflow does not have any rules against that so they won't get closed or deleted. I can understand the reasoning and necessity of this.
Now I personally and at least one other user on [algorithm] that I know of have had bad experiences where we unknowingly posted more or less complete solutions for problems from running contests, somewhat spoiling the overall fun. We want to avoid that in the future.
I have thus made it a habit to at least look at some particularly popular monthly long-term competitions to know what the problems are and avoid answering questions about those. If I see one, I often write a comment like "Fellow users, note that this is a question from a running contest (link) so think twice before answering". So that if people care, they at least know what is up. For me it is extremely helpful if somebody detects this and points it out, because if I write an answer, it will be on a much higher level, similar to some homework answers.
Yesterday I saw this question and did the same thing, pointed out that it is from a live HackerRank contest that ends today.
My comment was deleted by a moderator without comment. It went like this (paraphrased from memory):
Oh, so you're solving HackerRank too. I'm also working on that problem right now (link). Community, please don't spoil the fun for the participants
Even a comment I wrote later, which was a response to Nikunj's question, was deleted. It went like
Yes, it's from a live contest. See my earlier comment for a link
A comment asking the anonymous moderator why the comment was deleted was deleted.
Moderator, please clarify why my initial comment was deleted
I have to say, this silent deletion thing is really upsetting, it makes one feel very helpless. I can totally understand that it is necessary as a tool, but why was it used in this scenario? It just feels very wrong to me. Also I want these comments from others and don't want them to be deleted.
Is this going to be handled this way in the future too? Can somebody explain the reasoning behind this? Can the responsible moderator maybe say anything about what happened there?
EDIT: After ChrisF's comment, another question arises: If indeed it is the case that the probability that such a comment gets deleted for being unconstructive, then what other means do we have to communicate information like this with other members of the community? I figure there is none.