Yesterday, I ran across this answer. To me, it seemed a little odd to "casually" drop the name of a service, so I did a little digging. The user who posted the answer is, per his own profile, the Founder & CTO at Pushpad. Naturally, this is spam, as the help center clearly states
you must disclose your affiliation in your answers
The flag was promptly declined, given the reason of no evidence. This struck me as odd, so I did some more digging, as I suspected it wasn't a one-off thing.
Here's what I found, in addition to dozens more links to blog posts from his company without disclosure in most cases. I have left out responses that were relevant to the question, though I did go through this relatively quickly, so I may have wrongly missed or included some.
[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] [17] [18] [19] [20] [21] [22] [23] [24] [25]
[1] is the original answer I had a declined spam flag on, and [25] I feel is questionable. The other 23 seem to be textbook cases of blatant self-promotion without any disclosure.
I raised this issue to the user in the original answer I flagged, and he seems to think he is doing enough by having it on his profile.
The fact that I am the founder is clearly described in my StackOverflow profile... and it is also described in the answer that I have linked. In any case it is a relevant resource strictly related to the question: I think that most people will consider it useful.
I responded that usefulness is irrelevant, and that you must disclose the affiliation in the answer itself, per the help center referenced above.
Am I being overly pedantic, or is this not a blatant case of spam? I know if it were up to me, this account would be nuked, having two dozen self-promotion answers, plus dozens more blog links.
NB: I have only spam flagged [1]. The other 24 I have not touched, pending input. If the community agrees, I won't hesitate to spam flag the remaining.
Edit: [24] has been removed as there was a disclosure.