Re-reading the text (since about three weeks have passed) does not directly lead to a change of my opinion. The text still seems adequate and no spam links are in the text: the only 'links' are the images, which lead to the... images.
You are focusing on the wrong problem. The "added spam links" was just an auxiliary issue, not the primary one. The primary problem is that the submission consisted almost entirely of plagiarized content.
Plagiarism is outright prohibited. If a submission contains plagiarized material, it is unacceptable and should be rejected. Full stop.
It doesn't matter that the text "seems adequate" after reading it. It cannot be adequate, since it is plagiarized.
how can I find out myself the next time?
Pretty easy to tell here, if you are paying attention and actually reading the submission. In fact, you only had to read the first few words of the "Introduction" section. This clearly wasn't written to fit within the expected format for Documentation, and
What is a Mapping Load Mapping Load is definitely one of...
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
is a dead giveaway of a rote copy-paste. There was a heading in the original document, which they didn't bother to remove. It didn't have any punctuation, and its formatting was stripped, so it just appears like a big, stupid, irrelevant prefix.
Another good clue is the sub-headings throughout the examples. They aren't formatted like sub-headings, again suggesting a lame copy-paste job.
Finally, it's surprisingly grammatically coherent. (Well, except for the incomplete formatting.) 99% of submissions to Documentation aren't. While that certainly isn't a bad thing, it should make you suspicious. Copying and pasting the first few lines into a Google search would return the original site from which it was plagiarized—a dead giveaway. You weren't the first person to be fooled. It looks like this is plagiarized all over the web.