Long ago I asked a question that didn't get any reactions-- it earned me a "tumbleweed" badge :-). Today I happened to notice that it had been "deleted by Community". It didn't get any downvotes, it wasn't a duplicate, off-topic, or a terrible question; it just wasn't seen by anyone who could answer it. So which policy led to its deletion?
I didn't find anything specifically on neglected questions on meta. The question certainly doesn't meet any of the criteria for deletion listed here. On the contrary, there are any number of discussions that suggest that good unanswered questions should be kept around.
I'd prefer to leave this question in place in hopes that it will get an answer some day, but I don't need to be consoled or anything. Mainly I'm curious.
Edit: Thanks to @eldarerathis, we have the algorithm that led to its deletion: https://meta.stackexchange.com/a/92006/244042. "If the question is more than 365 days old, and ... has a score of 0, ... it will be automatically deleted." Well, the wisdom of the site's owners has spoken.
But I notice it takes 8 votes to reopen it; isn't that a little excessive? For a question with no downvotes? (No it doesn't, I misinterpreted the meaning of "7 votes remaining" in the pop-up. It's 3 votes, thanks @Louis.)