I contribute actively to open source, and when answering questions on stackoverflow.com sometimes I'll mention projects that are hosted from my github account.
Eleven of these posts were bulk deleted by a moderator with the following message:
Hello,
I'm writing in reference to your Stack Overflow account:
https://stackoverflow.com/users/674039/wim
We noticed that a substantial proportion of your posts seem to exist only to promote your product or website. Per the help center:
Be careful, because the community frowns on overt self-promotion and tends to vote it down and flag it as spam. Post good, relevant answers, and if some (but not all) happen to be about your product or website, so be it. However, you must disclose your affiliation in your answers. Also, if a huge percentage of your posts include a mention of your product or website, you're probably here for the wrong reasons. Our advertising rates are quite reasonable; contact our ad sales team for details.
Any type of "astroturfing" promotion is not acceptable. It brings down the overall value of genuine recommendations for everyone on the site.
If you can stay within the above guidelines, and offer questions and answers of genuine benefit to the community which happen to mention your affiliation or product in context -- and with full disclosure -- then your future contributions are welcome.
As for the currently deleted posts, you can edit your posts, update them and flag for undeletion. A simple disclosure is enough.
Regards, Stack Overflow Moderation Team
Please consider: I currently have 2,557 posts and it does not seem that 11 posts is a "substantial proportion" nor a "huge percentage" (0.43%) of those.
These deleted posts are all positively received, on-topic to the question, and at the time of writing, only one of these posts even had a downvote. This deleted post did mention authorship but was deleted anyway. So did this one.
Ironically, several of the posts accused of astroturfing had even started out their life as answers to stackoverflow.com questions (1, 2, 3) and were published on github afterwards, having deemed to be sufficiently useful to be worth packaging and releasing.
I agree with detecting (and possibly deleting) posts that are obviously promoting products, however, my github account does not advertise any product, and I've earned exactly $0.00 from my open source "affiliation".
Contributing to open source is something many developers do in their spare time, for free, to try and give back to the community. Being told "our advertising rates are quite reasonable; contact our ad sales team for details" is frankly a bit of a slap in the face. If this flagging is coming from an automated process, could it be toned down a bit to not flag OSS stuff hosted on github? Or perhaps actually take into account the votes on the post?
Links to the deleted posts:
Is there a way to list pip dependencies/requirements?
Splitting a Python list into a list of overlapping chunks
PyYAML : Control ordering of items called by yaml.load()
python mock - patching a method without obstructing implementation
How to get groups of numbers separated by commas in python?
pip - Installing specific package version does not work
Can pip list its binary wheels?
Python3 preparing packages for PyPi not including submodules
Generate requirements.txt from uninstalled wheel
Can PyYAML dump dict items in non-alphabetical order?
YAML python array object order
Note: I've since done the manual task of editing all those posts to explicitly attribute my projects. Check the edit history to see original context.