In the "Low Quality Answers" queue, how much cross-checking effort is required to verify that an external link in an otherwise-valid answer isn't improper self-promotion?
In the "Low Quality Answers" queue I was presented with the following review:
It looked like a legit answer, but to make sure it wasn't copied from a previous answer I clicked over to the question -- and found it had been deleted by "Community [BOT]" seemingly without substantial human intervention, as there was only onewith one downvote, likely indicative of a single "Spam" flagsflag cast by a Mod:
The DEMOBut why is this spam? The Demo link refers to a Q&A page on a linked site and it seems the answer was taken from the answer there, so maybe there's a violation of https://stackoverflow.com/help/referencing here and the link should have been labeled e. But it doesn't look like spamg. LookingSource rather than Demo. However, as pointed out in comments by MisterMiyagi the same site is listed as the home page for the author of the post, which is apparently what qualifies as the post as illegal self-promotion and thus delete-worthy.
So my question is, is this the sort of thing that should be caught in a Low Quality Answers audit? The poster's name isn't mentioned on the linked page (I did check that), so one would either need to spot a pattern of such answers, or, in Low Quality Posts, always manually cross-check external links in the post being reviewed against the profile page of the poster for signs of self-promotion. But is this something that reviewers are expected to do?
Looking at the timeline (screen shot here it seems answer was used as an audit once before -- and that reviewer failed the audit:
Should this answer be used as an audit? For that matter, was there enough evidence for. So I'm not the Community bot to automatically delete it as spam?only reviewer tripped up by this.
(Note I'm not an SME so I don't know if the answer is actually correctthis question was edited based on feedback in comments.)