There are a few parts here; I'll explain each of them separately.
The user in question recently defaced a number of their upvoted answers; it was brought up through an automated flag (deletion of content).
Here are some of the answers that were defaced (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15...(of 20 that I counted so far).
Clearly, this is concerning. Any time a user not only deletes their content, but purposefully obsfucates it; we want to figure out what's going on.
We take destruction and defacing of content seriously. It makes sense, since without content, we don't have anything. That's why we don't let question askers unilaterally delete their own questions with upvoted answers; and that's why we have a mod message specifically tailored to destruction or defacing of people's own content.
In this case, a very high percentage of content had upvotes -- in most cases it had multiple upvotes, meaning multiple people found it useful.
It's normally strange to find users deleting their own upvoted content, it's even more strange to have it defaced as well. A plausible scenario would be someone hacking into their account to 'get back' at them. With that many answers, it's not surprising if it went unnoticed.
I sent Balus the message linked to in his Google+ post. There are a few important things to note about this message:
- It's a templated message. This is so that moderators speak with a unified voice; and don't have to rewrite the same thing over and over for very common issues.
- The suspension was 'automatic' on the part of the message. If you send someone that message, the system strongly recommends suspending them. Since this was the first 'infraction' (if you can call it that), 7 days is the amount the system chose.
- The purpose of the suspension is to put a stop to the defacing, and figure out what's going on.
The final part is that I've been on a plane for most of the day. When I issued the message and suspension, I was about an hour outside of Portland with 10% battery left. I did leave a note for the moderators in the Blue Room so that if something happened, they'd know what and why. This is literally the first thing I saw when I opened my laptop at the hotel; and I'm responding as such.
In general, answerers should not deface their own content, whether it's deleted or not. If you find yourself deleting your upvoted content, the question is: Why? If it's due to a lack of feedback, remember this: answers don't just help the OP, they help everyone that has that same issue.
If you believe the question is never going to be of use to anyone, vote to close or delete the question (if it fits one of our stated reasons for closure).
I've reached out to Balus as well.