On August 30 I flagged a question by Ji Cha. I had noticed that this account had existed for only 12 days, but the user had posted nearly 50 questions, all with the makefile
tag, all concerning bugs or corner cases in GNU Make, and all of which had immediately received a single upvote (which is unusual in that tag). The user didn't respond much to answers or comments. Mad Scientist noted that these questions did not appear to be genuine questions from someone trying to write a makefile, and that the actual bugs had not been reported to bug-make@gnu.org. (Personally I think that some of the "questions" would make valuable bug reports, but that is not what this site is for.) I don't know the result of that flag, but it was marked "helpful". Ji Cha has not posted since.
The next day another user appeared, posting questions like this one (now deleted), with exactly the same style (subject, tone, format) but without the upvote shilling. I flagged this question, the flag was considered "helpful" and the account appears to have been deleted.
On September 17 same story, new account, exactly the same style but more overtly a rant against GNU Make, and more willing to argue in comments. Flagged, "helpful", deleted.
This user appears to have the resources to find bugs, shortcomings and corner cases in GNU Make, and some motive (other than reputation) to rail against it, but no desire to actually see it improved. (And clearly this user is not deterred by Whac-A-Mole.) My best guess is that someone wants to promote another tool by smearing GNU Make here.
Anyway, guess who's back.
I don't see much point in continuing to flag this abuse, and in this case it's not all that serious anyway. But do we really have no defense against this tactic?