About a month ago I asked a question on some technical aspect of C++, that went along these lines: "I read this and heard that, yet I have here what I believe to be a counter-example. What gives ?".
It received sort of an answer as a comment (the "I believe that [...]" kind), and was shortly bookmarked by myself and 2 other people. However, it received no upvote. About 3 weeks later, the question was downvoted once.
Earlier today, I had a discussion about the technical aspect that question was about. I wanted to link it and looked at my bookmarks to find it: the question was nowhere to be seen. It had just been a month since it was asked, had no accepted answer and had a score of -1, so the Roomba took care of it.
I find it odd that the Roomba would delete a question bookmarked by someone else than the author. Perhaps it wasn't good, but it seems that two unrelated people deemed it useful enough that they made it so they could easily return to it later.
They won't be able to.
One could argue that it they wanted to return to it, they should've upvoted it, but then an argument can also be made that upvoting and bookmarking mean different things, and that not everyone knows about Roomba rules.
Currently, no matter how many times a question is bookmarked, the Roomba doesn't care and may delete it and its related information. I could see the fact you don't need any reputation to bookmark questions as a possible cause, but I imagine that's not exceedingly hard to work around ("bookmarked by users with >n rep...").
Should the Roomba take bookmarks into account, and if not, what are the reasons ?