Regarding this answer, is it forbidden to suggest using a web page as a solution, or is it spamming?
The full answer (minus the actual link) reads:
I created an online, easy-to-use in-browser python to exe converter. Link here: [...]
Regarding this answer, is it forbidden to suggest using a web page as a solution, or is it spamming?
The full answer (minus the actual link) reads:
I created an online, easy-to-use in-browser python to exe converter. Link here: [...]
Answer: Not at all if it conforms with the requirements here (on Stack Overflow).
The help page pretty tells it all:
Here are some specific behaviors to avoid - even with the best of intentions, these will nearly always result in your posts being flagged as spam:
- Don't talk about your product / website / book / job too much. Folks will read your answers for their ability to solve a specific problem; if you're good at doing that, then they'll find themselves more interested in who you are and what you're working on. If you respond only to questions where the answer can be something you're selling, they'll assume you're just here to sell.
- Don't tell - show! The best way to avoid being seen as a snake-oil salesman is to demonstrate a solution rather than simply asserting the problem can be solved.
- Don't include links except to support what you've written. Links are not a substitute for including information in your answer itself, and links should always be directly relevant to a part of your answer. See also: Your answer is in another castle: when is an answer not an answer?
I personally wouldn't consider any suggestion of off-site resource as spam, provided it meets the following criteria:
I (personally) have a few more things to check before determining whether it's spam:
This answer applies not only to web-apps, but every suggestion of off-site resource.
For the post that you give as example, here's my analysis:
(Help page) Don't talk about your product / website / book / job too much.
It's hard to tell. Given that the user has posted at least 3 of them, with highly similar wording, I think it's a bit too much. 2 could be a limitation.
(Help page) Don't tell - show!
Obviously it's not conforming this rule. The three answers is nothing more than a link. My comment in your image reads "Even if it's not spam, it's NAA for being link-only".
Don't include links except to support what you've written.
Same as above. The link is not a supportive material, but almost the whole answer.
Disclosure of affiliation.
Good job on this in the first sentence: "I wrote...".
Accompanied with proper explanation
Apparently there's no explanation at all. The whole answer is kinda "you can use it".
Appears in a reasonable number.
Again as above, I believe 2 at most is acceptable even though it's related. (A moderator cleared all the spam flags so the user wasn't penalized).
Not sure what adverb to use here, but Smokey has already recorded py2exe.net
.
So given all above, I would choose to flag it as spam as I really did for its excessive promotional behavior.
.exe
isn't malicious?"Exists only to promote a product or service, does not disclose the author's affiliation.".
By that very narrow definition this does not qualify for the spam
flag as they disclose their affiliation.
That does not make it a good answer by any means and should be down voted and deleted for other very reasonable reasons.
Included in the How not to be a spammer link it clearly states that these link only answers are not acceptable..
Don't include links except to support what you've written. Links are not a substitute for including information in your answer itself, and links should always be directly relevant to a part of your answer. See also: http://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/225370/your-answer-is-in-another-castle-when-is-an-answer-not-an-answer
So "spam", no, low quality, down vote/delete worthy, yes.
I'd say a suggested web application that directly solves the problem is never spam.
Although it's probably almost always a link-only answer ("not an answer") that should be deleted, since it's entirely dependent on the site remaining active. No amount of explanation can change that, unless the gist of the code on the website appears in the answer itself, in which case the link is probably more just additional information for an otherwise appropriate answer.
Although in this case the question is probably off topic, since it's roughly asking for a tool recommendation, for which all the answers will largely be links elsewhere.
Spam gets punished quite heavily on Stack Overflow, which should be reserved for users actually acting maliciously, not for a single well-intentioned (albeit misguided) attempt to answer a question.
If the user is posting such recommendations on questions where it's hard to argue that it's a direct answer to the question, that's probably spam (but I might still opt for not-an-answer if the intention seems good).
If there's a pattern of a user posting such answers, flagging for a moderator to get involved could be an appropriate course of action (assuming the user hasn't managed to get themselves banned in the mean time).
I think this is also an important question.
For a first post, I might be more inclined to flag it as spam (if it's hard to quickly tell whether the site seems legitimate, and also obviously for something that's obviously not legitimate).
But when the user has made a few reasonable posts to date (like in this case), a recommendation seems a whole lot more likely to be well-intentioned, so I'd tend towards a not-an-answer flag.