I just noticed this review audit:
https://stackoverflow.com/review/low-quality-posts/5450522
And it shows an answer that, on the surface, looks totally reasonable, included below for <10K users. (The "MDB Repair Kit" is a link to the product's site):
To repair a corrupt .mdb database of MS Access, one can try Compact and Repair feature of MS Access. It repairs corrupt database and makes it accessible for database users. Other than this one can also use import feature of MS Access that helps database users import their corrupt database to a new database file.
If both these solutions fail to fix this corruption,
Then one must check some third-party access database repair or recovery software. I would like to suggest MDB Repair Kit software here to repair corrupt .mdb and .accdb files. One can check its free demo version before buying its full version.
Hope this would be helpful.
Now, the question is not a good fit for Stack Overflow, and it was deleted a few days ago. That being said, the answer provides two normal ways of solving the problem, and provides a link to a commercial product that also does so (the user has since been deleted, so its hard to say if he is affiliated or if this is repeat behavior). The OP even asked for a commercial product recommendation!
It seems that this is borderline spam at best, and I would likely have failed the audit if I didn't notice that it was a deleted question. It raised my "spam" signal, but when reading it, it seemed like a decent answer to a bad question.
Can this be removed from the audit list?
As an aside, it would be nice if you could challenge audits you pass (like this one for me) in addition to those you fail as have been suggested previously. We really need a human factor in these...