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As a reviewer, it's just these "low quality post" audits that I sometimes do not pass. Here's a really puzzling one: https://stackoverflow.com/review/low-quality-posts/9220804

In this case, the asker says "I cannot ping it, but I can access the the virtual machine." Someone answered:

It looks like your firewall may be blocking ICMP requests. Depending on the security suite running on your server it'll take a different process to re-enable them.

I can definitely see this "gotcha" affecting multiple Azure users that may have a firewall in place causing this issue. It may have not been the correct answer in the case of this user, but I would hardly classify it like this:

This post has severe quality issues. It is abusive nonsense, noise, spam, blatantly off-topic or otherwise irredeemable – readers will find it offensive or repulsive rather than helpful. Please delete or recommend deletion when reviewing such posts.

So I clicked that no, it's not a low quality post, and failed the audit.

What am I missing here? Is this truly considered a "low quality" post? There was a comment left that "it isn't an answer," but it clearly is:

Q: "Why can't I ping this virtual machine"
A: "Because ICMP is blocked."

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  • I wouldn't call it "kinda a comment," but maybe that's not a universal opinion. Copying the text of the answer...
    – Jacob
    Commented Aug 19, 2015 at 21:31

1 Answer 1

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The answer as it now stands is so-so, not really VLQ, but the revision history gives a hint as to what's going on:

Revision history entry with company tagline removed

A company's tagline removed, and the post deleted by a moderator. It's quite likely that this post was one of several in which the user was trying to advertise a company or product.

The post, having been deleted in response to VLQ (or maybe spam) flags, is now a audit candidate.

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  • 2
    I see! That definitely explains it. It's too bad I'd get bit in an audit because of something that was only historically very low quality, but that's probably a really hard problem to solve.
    – Jacob
    Commented Aug 19, 2015 at 21:49
  • 1
    There's probably a proposal that addresses this problem; I'm trying to find it.
    – jscs
    Commented Aug 19, 2015 at 21:50
  • 3
    You're right, it did have a spam flag on it, a flag that was marked as helpful when the post was deleted. That triggered its use as an audit. I've cleared the spam flag and left the post deleted, which should remove it as an audit case. Normally, we don't edit these to remove the spammy content, but I think this happened in the middle of a series of edits to remove taglines.
    – Brad Larson Mod
    Commented Aug 19, 2015 at 22:09
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    @BradLarson Perhaps a solution could be that the version of the question is flagged an audit, rather than the question. In this case, the reviewers see exactly what the question was when it was flagged and marked as a helpful flag.
    – Rob Mod
    Commented Aug 20, 2015 at 2:58
  • 3
    @Rob Submit a feature request?
    – jpmc26
    Commented Aug 20, 2015 at 18:47

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