I was the mod who handled the original flags on those posts. As far as I can remember I originally declined them, not disputed them as you indicated and subsequent actions on the post later changed them to disputed1.
Here's why I did that:
The thing that makes a post spam (i.e. nefarious/malevolent) and not just bad/misguided is undisclosed affiliation. Even after a fair bit of digging around I still didn't see a single bit of evidence to suggest that there's any affiliation here. In fact I'd say the evidence is more the opposite. If the OP were affiliated with CloudEra they wouldn't post awful questions like: "In Cloudera Quickstart VM how to upgrade latest version of JDK". I'm 95% certain that in the OP's mind sharing that newsletter was helpful and not something they stand to benefit from in any shape.
To elaborate on the affiliation point further: any given question (or crappy non-question) can be topical or not and totally independently have undisclosed affiliations:
| Topical | Off-topic |
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Undisclosed affiliation | Case 1 | Case 2 |
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No affiliation | Case 3 | Case 4 |
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For Cases 1,2 and 4 it's clear that they're wrong and spam and I'd usually cast a binding spam flag and destroy the account or mod message as appropriate. For Case 3 though it's not so clear cut: if they're in the right ballpark and don't stand to benefit from the misstep does coming down hard achieve anything? I don't believe it does and using the close/vote system to indicate the error does absolutely no harm and leaves the chance for learning/improvement open.
As for the declines, I use flag declines as an honest reflection of my appraisal of the situation. It's the only feedback given usually, if it's not honest there's basically no point in giving any feedback at all. I do that for any flag that takes investigation, be it "suspicious voting", "possible plagiarism" or spam. The message to take away from a simple flag decline like that is not that it's a major punishment, simply that the mod had a look and didn't see it your way. I didn't hand out review bans, or mod message for misuse of flags because that clearly isn't appropriate. Don't sweat it, unless you're getting a huge percentage of flag declines, nothing bad will happen. It's likely that some edge cases will come up differently when they're looked at with mod access from time to time.
To be clear it's such a terrible "question" that it isn't even a question. I took action besides just declining the flags: I down-voted it, cast a binding close vote and left it to roomba and the Q-ban algorithm signals that these actions give. Leaving it to roomba has one big advantage: the user experience from the perspective of the poster is much better - it maximizes the odds that they'll see the "it's unclear what you're asking" help center advice and actually do better next time (remember: this isn't a one hit wonder spam account) rather than just repeat the same mistake in a "hey where did that post go?" way. Early deletion can be harmful, fast deletion doesn't serve any benefit given that the Q was low enough scored to be excluded from the front page and tag subscription emails.
1Spam/Offensive flags, unlike other flags are a bit weird in that they can be retrospectively cleared because of the penalties they carry. But that action is grouped on all of those flags cast on that post.