While going through my (almost) daily dose of Low Quality queue reviews, I noticed something that seemed kind of odd, and was wondering if it might be worth a discussion/investigation.
There were a whole bunch of clear link-only answers. Which by itself is not unusual, they sometimes seem to arrive in batches. But what jumped out this time was that most of these link-only answers were several years old, and came from the same user.
I don't have the tools to know if these flags came from an automatic script, or if the posts were flagged by a user. But in either case, it seems somewhat worrying:
If it's a script, why would it pick out posts that are almost exclusively from a single user? There must be a huge number of link-only answers if you run searches that go a few years back. Unless this user was exceptionally "productive" at posting link-only answers, this looks non-random at first sight.
If a user flagged the posts, it looks targeted. In that case, it would seem very similar to serial upvotes/downvotes to me. The flags were absolutely justified. But for serial upvotes/downvotes, the communicated policy is that they are always wrong, even if the votes are justified based on the quality of the posts. Just the fact of focusing attention to a specific user is considered unacceptable when it comes to votes. Shouldn't the same apply to flags?
I'd rather not post the username if it can be avoided. Since the user might already have been singled out, I'd rather not make it worse by engaging the meta effect. But I can provide it (and links to reviews) if it's found necessary and worthwhile.