9

I am still relatively new to Low Quality Post reviews, and I got hit on this audit question, but I don't understand why.

I am definitely not familiar with google-bigquery, but this answer appeared to directly address the question and provided a screenshot to illustrate what they were talking about.

When I was reviewing, I saw that the question was asked 18 days ago with no other answers, so it didn't seem like a piggy backing post. I don't find it to be a particularly brilliant answer, but it looked like a legitimate attempt that would at least point someone in a new direction to help solve their problem, and it didn't seem to meet these guidelines:

It is abusive nonsense, noise, spam, blatantly off-topic or otherwise irredeemable – readers will find it offensive or repulsive rather than helpful.

I want to make sure I'm not doing bad reviews. What am I missing here?

9
  • "This answer was marked as spam or rude or abusive" Commented Nov 24, 2018 at 14:25
  • 3
    It was spam for a product that had nothing to do with the question. A basic way to pass these kind of audits, even without checking the validity of the answer, is to slow down a bit before you are going to dismiss a flag from a concerned SO user. At a minimum have a look at the Q+A to see what other posts are there. Not there anymore, you can't fail the audit. Commented Nov 24, 2018 at 14:40
  • 1
    I looked up that tool the answerer mentioned, and it's a free extension, so I'm not sure how exactly it is spam for commercial gain. If the answer didn't actually solve the problem, shouldn't that be handled with downvotes instead of flags?
    – SandPiper
    Commented Nov 24, 2018 at 14:47
  • 1
    Brad Larson deleted it, maybe he can explain?
    – SandPiper
    Commented Nov 24, 2018 at 14:53
  • 9
    Spam doesn't have to mean that the product costs money, I could spam by linking people to my personal blog since that would drive up page views and potentially net me some more ad money without the user spending anything. The point is, the link to the product was unsolicited and was advertising the product, even if it was free. If it had come with a good explanation as to why that tool actually does help solve the issue, then it might not have been spam, but in this case, the product suggestion was completely incorrect and not desired, just serving to promote the product.
    – Davy M
    Commented Nov 24, 2018 at 15:14
  • 1
    There's a help center How to not be a spammer that might give you insight in the meaning of "spam" in SE context.
    – Andrew T.
    Commented Nov 24, 2018 at 15:31
  • In addition, the user's profile indicates affiliation with web.superquery.io, which indicates they provide superQuery, the product that was promoted in the answer you were reviewing. The OP did not disclose in the post their affiliation with the product that they mentioned. That, by itself, makes the answer spam, under the definitions that SE/SO uses for spam. If it was a good answer, then it's reasonable to leave a comment asking the user to provide disclosure, but this is not a good answer, so it's spam. If you want to be nice, then NAA.
    – Makyen Mod
    Commented Nov 25, 2018 at 1:31
  • 1
  • 1
    "I am definitely not familiar with google-bigquery" -- I think in cases like that picking Looks OK is borderline abuse. There is no shame in using “Skip”
    – gnat
    Commented Nov 25, 2018 at 5:21

1 Answer 1

-8

It's a one sentence answer with an image, and it does not stand without the image.

I don't like it. I can't quite understand it either. Also, this is a programming question. Where is the code in the answer.

For that matter, where is the code in the question? It's rather bad quality and I went back and downvoted it.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .