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I recently failed this review audit, however I don't understand why:

The answer seems reasonable. It provides an answer to the question and a link for further reading. It's not a spam link, I followed it (after failing the audit) and it's a legit tutorial. It's also not a link-only answer, because it provides something around the link (including a code example). It's not a great answer, but it doesn't have anything in it that strikes me as "spam" or "offensive".

Is this a bad review audit? If it's not, what did I miss?

This does seem similar to this question, but it's a different review audit and I could just be misunderstanding something.

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  • 2
    Looks like a mod spam flagged it - I think I can see why given other related bits, but yes, that's not a great audit and certainly doesn't warrant contributing towards a 2 day ban which is now lifted.
    – Jon Clements Mod
    Commented Aug 25, 2019 at 5:07

1 Answer 1

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The post was deleted by a moderator as spam1 and has no upvotes. Thus, the system thinks that it's a valid post to use for a "this is a bad post" audit.

What you missed: Undisclosed affiliation

The linked article was authored by "Nicolás Bistolfi". The username of the OP appears to use a familiar name for "Nicolás" (i.e. "Nico Bistolfi"). The user's profile indicates they use "nicolasbistolfi" on both GitHub and Twitter. The profile states that they are the CEO of the same company as is claimed by the author of the linked blog. As such, I'm satisfied the OP is the author of the linked blog.

The OP does not disclose, in the answer, their affiliation with the site they've linked. Thus, the post contains a link with undisclosed affiliation. As a result, it is considered spam, under the definitions we use on Stack Overflow/Stack Exchange (please see: How to not be a spammer, What signifies "Good" self promotion?, , What is the exact definition of "spam" for Stack Overflow?, and What makes something spam).

[Note: the element_in_scroll function is also directly copied from the linked blog entry. The copying brings up plagiarism issues, if the user is not also the author of the blog. Even if you're the original author, it's usually best to be explicit that you are copying your own work, as that makes it such that there's no confusion.]

My personal preference, for users who have one or two posts with undisclosed affiliation, is to inform the user of the disclosure requirement and give them the opportunity to rectify the lack of disclosure. I'm much more interested in doing that if the content is good and actually addresses the question. I'll usually leave a comment and schedule a revisit to the post a day or two later to see if they've edited in disclosure. A reasonable number of users respond well to such comments and edit their posts to include disclosure.

Given that a moderator deleted the post, and the user has at least one non-deleted post where they linked to another article they wrote (they did disclose affiliation in that one), I suspect that there may be some additional deleted posts by that OP which also contained undisclosed affiliation, or that the moderator had more information than is available to non-moderators now.


  1. The answer has a score of -1 and no upvotes. It is deleted and locked by the Community♦ user. It's hidden behind a "this answer was marked as spam or rude or abusive" banner. The only "normal" way I'm aware of for a post to have that combination of factors is for no one to have voted on the post and a moderator to have deleted it as spam or rude/abusive, without any other spam or rude/abusive flags active on the post.
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  • How much of this would've been obvious when reviewing the answer?
    – S.S. Anne
    Commented Aug 25, 2019 at 15:04
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    @JL2210 As best I can tell, all the information was available when reviewing the answer. In this instance, to find the undisclosed affiliation, you would have had to go to the blog post page, but you said you dd that to determine if it was spam. The part that you would not have been able to see, given that you have <10k rep, was how the answer was deleted (i.e. that it was deleted as spam by a moderator), but you would have been able to determine that it was deleted, which would have indicated the review was a "bad post" audit.
    – Makyen Mod
    Commented Aug 25, 2019 at 21:16
  • @Mayken I did it after I failed the audit (because I noticed it was "spam").
    – S.S. Anne
    Commented Aug 25, 2019 at 21:42
  • I guess in the future I should double-check that the answer exists before reviewing it and if so skip it.
    – S.S. Anne
    Commented Aug 25, 2019 at 21:45

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