There are a couple different user cases here that should be looked at.
The crafty spammer
This is the one people seem to be pointing at first and saying it won't catch them. This is true. The system currently in place won't catch them either. That is, there is no system in place to catch crafty spammers who play with urls to try to avoid pragmatic detection. Thats something that we, the readers do and notice and say "hey wait a moment..." and start throwing spam flags around.
The well meaning false positive
Yes, people linking to google searches, MSDN, w3schools, wikipedia, grepcode, lxr.free-electrons.com or other useful sources of canonical information. They would trigger such a flag. There are two ways to deal with this (either, or both in combination):
- Global whitelists maintained by the mods. Some domain name list that the mods say "yep, thats a good source, don't bother me with it."
A per user 'ok' list. A bit more user oriented, a mod has gotten an auto-flag for a given user posting links to some resource. The mod looks, says 'ok', and it gets marked as ok.
The I didn't know I was not supposed to do that
This is the ones that the suggestion is trying to catch. People trying to boost their page rank or just publicize their blog a little bit through some answers. The most notorious forms of this are the half an answer as an answer here (hey, its an answer, its immune to the NAA flag) with a link for "more information can be found at XYZ.com"). Kind of like those Super Bowl ads for Victoria's secrets and go-daddy (not that I watch those ads).
Sometimes this is again a well meaning person who doesn't know that the community tends to get rather irate when this is discovered and shows up with down votes en masse. For someone who is trying to follow the rules, a bit of a warning from a mod might avoid a user who would otherwise be quite put off when the meta effect hits hard. This is what the system is supposed to catch.
Other times, this is someone who is actually trying to spam (and just not doing a great job of it - like the one that this proposal draws from). The person is essentially putting a signature file with their blog or consultancy in every post. And again, this is what the proposal is supposed to try to catch. In this case, the mod would likely be a bit more slap on the wrist and say "cut it out" before it becomes a real problem.
The other ones? Its going to be a little bit of overhead that gets cleaned up quickly for the mods, or won't show up there any more than it does now with the occasional custom flag.
On that 'per user ok list' I mentioned
Just random late night brainstorming. Each time a person puts a link in a post that link is associated with the user. This information is kind of already out there - you can search for specific urls via advanced search (example: url:"*.pastebin.com" (and yes, thats a different search than url:"pastebin.com"). I'm not sure how much is actually behind that search.
With some heuristic known by the devs, when that counter goes over a certain threshold for a given number of posts, the auto-flag is raised and the mods can look at it. The reason I mentioned that per-user ok, is that one could hypothetically have another boolean field associated with that counter of 'ok' which would permanently exclude that url from raising additional flags for that user.