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I just passed an audit reviewing this post. It was an high quality post, and my upvote was appropriate. What's weird is that I was presented this warning:

Our system has identified this post as possible spam; please review carefully

Why so? Nothing in the post looked like spam. At first I thought it could have been added to make the audit more difficult, so I searched on Meta for info about such warning, found this and learnt that the spam notification is not related to the audit.

Well, now I know that the system actually identified the answer as possible spam, but why?

This has been closed as duplicate of the post I linked, but note that it isn't: there, the audit was correctly identified as spam and the OP wanted info about the alert. Here, I have already gotten such info and I am questioning whether the audit was incorrectly identified as spam, or to know why it was. Update: the question was reopened. Update: the question was closed again as duplicate of the same question, but it is not because of the same reason.

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  • Not sure how accurate that old information is. This post has had two other audits before yours and neither of those had the spam banner at the top, so it's not the post itself which was identified as spam. An external factor (possibly random) unrelated to the post caused it to appear there.
    – animuson StaffMod
    Jul 17, 2016 at 21:55
  • @animuson thanks. That's curious, does it mean it's a bug? Jul 17, 2016 at 22:07
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    Maybe Reddit links are considered suspicious?
    – BSMP
    Jul 17, 2016 at 22:40
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    Doesn't that warning show up at random on audits to make sure you don't flag good posts as spam just because of the banner?
    – user4639281
    Jul 18, 2016 at 2:37
  • I am yet to understand why reviewers are expected to identify spam at all. It is a completely different function from reviewing.
    – user207421
    Jul 18, 2016 at 3:49
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    @EJP: Completely different from reviewing what? Close/reopen voters are not expected to identify spam, nor (usually) LQP reviewers, but it is the height of absurdity to suppose that suggested edit reviewers should not be paying attention to possible spam suggestions. If not them, who else? And spam detection is in fact one of the primary design goals of FP and LA reviews. (To a lesser extent, Triage as well.) Jul 18, 2016 at 4:02
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    @NathanTuggy I do not agree. In my opinion it is the height of absurdity to require reviewers to be responsible for identifying spam. Reviewers should be concerned with question & answer quailty, answerability, relevance, etc. Spam is a completely separate issue and it is unfair to the point of preposterousness to require volunteers to identify it correctly. In many cases that isn't possible without following a link, which is well above and beyond the call. I gave up reviewing some years ago because of this absurd requirement, and I am not alone.
    – user207421
    Jul 18, 2016 at 6:12
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    @EJP You still vote on questions/answers you see across the site right? Surely that's exactly the kind of ad-hoc volunteer reviewing feature you want. Meanwhile clicking "looks OK" or "no action needed" is explicitly signing-off on the post being appropriate to stick around for along time. Most spam follows one of a handful of preset patterns which those signing-off on it absolutely need to be alert to.
    – Flexo Mod
    Jul 18, 2016 at 6:21
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    @EJP: Quite frankly, out of all the very many duties FP and LA reviewers must handle, checking for spam is one of the easiest and most valuable services, as almost anyone on the Internet has some experience spotting spam. Objecting to that, and not to all the other miscellaneous things the queues involve, is pretty silly. Jul 18, 2016 at 6:35
  • @TinyGiant That's what I Thought at first, but the meta post I linked suggests that it is not the case Jul 18, 2016 at 7:19
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    @NathanTuggy It is not easier to identify spam than to identify nonsense, irrelevance, etc., especially if it requires chasing links, which I do not do on this site for any reason whatsoever. and the various tools that can be used to mechanise it are a lot more effective. As in every other discussion I have engaged in on this topic, you comment does not actually address the issue, which is that reviewers should not be required to identify spam as a condition of reviewing. If there are low quality reviews, SO should address that issue specifically, e.g. via the voting system, or bans.
    – user207421
    Jul 18, 2016 at 12:17
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    @EJP then the solution is simple, skip. If you aren't, for whatever reason, doing the best effort when reviewing maybe reviewing isn't for you. Leave a more motivated reviewer to do the work.
    – Braiam
    Jul 18, 2016 at 23:18
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    @gnat The question was already closed as a dup of the post you link. Note that such post was already linked in the original question and I had already expained why I don't think it's a dup (I ma be wrong, though) Sep 3, 2016 at 9:50
  • thanks for heads up. Agree it's not a duplicate, retracted my vote
    – gnat
    Sep 3, 2016 at 9:54
  • confusingly, i got the warning on a clearly high quality question that has zero votes, but when i click the questions title, i see the same question with upvotes and an accepted answer. (edit: oh this is a test. duh)
    – aep
    Oct 6, 2020 at 8:52

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