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Michael M.
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I think Kevin B's comment on the answer in question perfectly conveys the confusion:

Does the user deserve to lose 100 rep for linking to a github repo they own without properly attributing it?

In the answer's original question (which I wrote), the user self-promoting themself posted a substandard answer and then filled half of their answer with a plea for others to like and subscribe to their YouTube channel. This kind of behavior seems much more likely to warrant a spam flag, however in a way it is somewhat similar to the hypothetical situation in Kevin B's comment.

I think the only time a post should be considered for being spam is if 1) the post was created to promote the author, not to help share knowledge; and 2) the product being promoted is for commercial purposes.

Under these criteria, linking to a freely-licensed GitHub repo that the user owns and forgetting to attribute it does not warrant a full out -100 rep punishment. However, filling half of your answer with "like and subscribe" does because a YouTube channel is more likely to generate ad revenue and does deserve the punishment.

A more murky situation would be if an employee of service ends an otherwise non-spam answer with a single sentence along the lines of "Alternatively, you can use [unattributed service] to do this for you.". IMO, if the answer solves the question, then should be kept and does not deserve a flag. The punishment does not fit the crime when only one problematic sentence needs to be edited out.

So, I think a fairer guidance might be as follows:

Promoting a product or service for commercial purposes is the sole purpose for why the post was created.

I think Kevin B's comment on the answer in question perfectly conveys the confusion:

Does the user deserve to lose 100 rep for linking to a github repo they own without properly attributing it?

In the answer's original question (which I wrote), the user self-promoting themself posted a substandard answer and then filled half of their answer with a plea for others to like and subscribe to their YouTube channel. This kind of behavior seems much more likely to warrant a spam flag, however in a way it is somewhat similar to the hypothetical situation in Kevin B's comment.

I think the only time a post should be considered for being spam is if 1) the post was created to promote the author, not to help share knowledge; and 2) the product being promoted is for commercial purposes.

Under these criteria, linking to a freely-licensed GitHub repo that the user owns and forgetting to attribute it does not warrant a full out -100 rep punishment. However, filling half of your answer with "like and subscribe" does because a YouTube channel is more likely to generate ad revenue and does deserve the punishment.

A more murky situation would be if an employee of service ends an otherwise non-spam answer with a single sentence along the lines of "Alternatively, you can use [unattributed service] to do this for you.". IMO, if the answer solves the question, then should be kept and does not deserve a flag. The punishment does fit the crime when only one problematic sentence needs to be edited out.

So, I think a fairer guidance might be as follows:

Promoting a product or service for commercial purposes is the sole purpose for why the post was created.

I think Kevin B's comment on the answer in question perfectly conveys the confusion:

Does the user deserve to lose 100 rep for linking to a github repo they own without properly attributing it?

In the answer's original question (which I wrote), the user self-promoting themself posted a substandard answer and then filled half of their answer with a plea for others to like and subscribe to their YouTube channel. This kind of behavior seems much more likely to warrant a spam flag, however in a way it is somewhat similar to the hypothetical situation in Kevin B's comment.

I think the only time a post should be considered for being spam is if 1) the post was created to promote the author, not to help share knowledge; and 2) the product being promoted is for commercial purposes.

Under these criteria, linking to a freely-licensed GitHub repo that the user owns and forgetting to attribute it does not warrant a full out -100 rep punishment. However, filling half of your answer with "like and subscribe" does because a YouTube channel is more likely to generate ad revenue and does deserve the punishment.

A more murky situation would be if an employee of service ends an otherwise non-spam answer with a single sentence along the lines of "Alternatively, you can use [unattributed service] to do this for you.". IMO, if the answer solves the question, then should be kept and does not deserve a flag. The punishment does not fit the crime when only one problematic sentence needs to be edited out.

So, I think a fairer guidance might be as follows:

Promoting a product or service for commercial purposes is the sole purpose for why the post was created.

Source Link
Michael M.
  • 11k
  • 12
  • 33

I think Kevin B's comment on the answer in question perfectly conveys the confusion:

Does the user deserve to lose 100 rep for linking to a github repo they own without properly attributing it?

In the answer's original question (which I wrote), the user self-promoting themself posted a substandard answer and then filled half of their answer with a plea for others to like and subscribe to their YouTube channel. This kind of behavior seems much more likely to warrant a spam flag, however in a way it is somewhat similar to the hypothetical situation in Kevin B's comment.

I think the only time a post should be considered for being spam is if 1) the post was created to promote the author, not to help share knowledge; and 2) the product being promoted is for commercial purposes.

Under these criteria, linking to a freely-licensed GitHub repo that the user owns and forgetting to attribute it does not warrant a full out -100 rep punishment. However, filling half of your answer with "like and subscribe" does because a YouTube channel is more likely to generate ad revenue and does deserve the punishment.

A more murky situation would be if an employee of service ends an otherwise non-spam answer with a single sentence along the lines of "Alternatively, you can use [unattributed service] to do this for you.". IMO, if the answer solves the question, then should be kept and does not deserve a flag. The punishment does fit the crime when only one problematic sentence needs to be edited out.

So, I think a fairer guidance might be as follows:

Promoting a product or service for commercial purposes is the sole purpose for why the post was created.