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Are reviewers currently too harsh in votes to delete link-only answers?

Theory

I'm aware this has been a topic for debate for a long time, from Your answer is in another castle through FAQ and a bunch (α β γ) of user complaints here.

The documentation on the main site seems pretty clear to me:

When should I vote to delete an answer?

You may vote to delete answers in the following cases:

  • The answer is extremely low quality: There is little to no scope for improvement
  • The answer doesn't attempt to answer the question; it may be a comment or a separate question altogether.

So, if the answer actually tries to address the problem, and has some scope for improvement even if poor, it should not be deleted.

Practice

So, with that in mind, I run into this answer in the Low Quality Posts review queue:

FingerprintManagerComact.isDetected does not work correctly Please vote for this bug https://issuetracker.google.com/issues/37132365

This is clearly not a good answer, but looking at the question, it does contain two important bits of information:

  • The issue the questioner is seeing is due to an upstream bug.
  • Through the link, specifics of the change that causes the problem and ongoing debate.

So, I vote to keep so I can edit the answer to include the current status from the bug... but boom, turns out the thing is already deleted.

So, now the site is left with a question with one (unhelpful) answer and no link to the upstream bug that might actually be of use to anyone running into the problem. This does not seem like a good outcome for users to me.

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That answer was not deleted in accordance with the canonical "Another Castle" guidance. As you note, "this is an upstream bug" is an explanation. It's not very good, since it contains no workaround or details of how and when the bug strikes, but it is an answer. The link adds more information to allow tracking, but unfortunately that causes oversensitive reviewers to immediately think "link-only!" and delete.

This is just as wrong as it was when Shog wrote that post originally. But these days, there's a lot of posts that get deleted that way, many of which show up later as audits in various queues, blindly passing on bad guidance through inapplicable auto-comments to more reviewers, who will then continue the cycle.

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