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Yesterday I was feeling for trying to go through the Low Quality post queue. After recommending deletion for quite a few posts I stumbled upon this https://stackoverflow.com/review/low-quality-posts/16468204 which I felt was at least border line ok after viewing the question with comments.

I understand that the audits are automatic and there could be ambiguous posts. However, it would be great with some guidelines on what should be ok, and if you fail an audit, it would be great with a reason why the audit fails.

As it stands now I cannot find any guidance on how to review LQ posts.

My suggestion would be that all questions that are selected for an audit has a clear reason why the question should have been deleted so we understand the error we made in selecting Looks ok.

This might mean the moderator closing the question should write a reason why for it to be selected in an audit.

This put me off reviewing LQ posts; randomly failing audits is not a good feeling. I've been doing a lot of reviewing in suggested edits and have not had much problems with that queue so I would say it's queue dependent.

Screenshot of question

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    This put me off reviewing LQ posts ... I think that may be the point. It's definitely put more than a few of us off reviewing... Jun 20, 2017 at 22:29
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    Links to third-party sites should be a trigger for: you should pay a bit more attention. Is it a link to a private blog or app from the poster (i.e. advertisement)? Is it a common site (i.e. fine to link to)? Or is that link otherwise suspicious (i.e. ref-link or points to a different site than expected (like "How to Answer ... further reading: good-site.com" but then links to bad-site.com)? If that link isn't that easy to decide and you don't want to dig a bit deeper, then prefer to skip the review. This case here might be from a user who linked to his Github to advertise his project(s) there.
    – Tom
    Jun 20, 2017 at 22:50
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    And you also need to check such posts for being "link-only", but this isn't the case here.
    – Tom
    Jun 20, 2017 at 22:51
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    @Tom & jontro It was definitely converted to a comment. When I look at the review task (and the deleted answer), it explicitly states that the answer was converted to a comment by deceze♦. In other words, where the screenshot in the question shows "deleted by deceze♦ May 24 at 23:51", I see "converted to a comment by deceze♦ May 24 at 23:51". I assume this difference is a >=10k rep feature.
    – Makyen Mod
    Jun 21, 2017 at 3:59
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    There is no shame in using "Skip" <--- that's the main guidance
    – gnat
    Jun 22, 2017 at 10:12
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    @gnat I would say that's not the case here. I skip when I am unsure
    – jontro
    Jun 22, 2017 at 10:32
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    @gnat The answer isn't great, and saying that there's no action needed in something like First Posts would be wrong, but the post doesn't merit deletion from LQP, so yes, the user did do the right thing. The moderator that acted on that post incorrectly marked an answer as spam, despite it not actually being spam, and actually being an answer to the question (albeit not a good one).
    – Servy
    Jun 22, 2017 at 14:04
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    @gnat When a post looks okay and doesn't merit any action from the review the correct course of action is to say that it looks okay. Skipping is something that you do when you don't know what the correct action is. Here the user did know what the correct course of action was, and they took it. Skipping posts that you know don't merit any action from the queue is incorrect. Your assertion that it would take you more time than you want to spend figuring out the correct course of action doesn't make it wrong for someone else to actually take the time and choose the correct action.
    – Servy
    Jun 22, 2017 at 14:11
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    @gnat The post does look okay. There are no actions that are appropriate to take from that queue other than to say that it looks okay. The post has problems, but it doesn't have problems that the queue is there to solve. If you want to go to the post directly and take some additional actions, outside of the queue, you certainly can, but you're not obligated to. The OP did their due diligence to ensure that the post didn't merit any moderation action from the queue, and it didn't, so they correctly indicated as much by marking the post as no action needed.
    – Servy
    Jun 22, 2017 at 14:43
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    @gnat You are not only wrong, you are misleading the reviewer. The LPQ queue doesn't exist to fix minor formatting problems with posts. It's there to delete posts that are complete garbage. If you want to spend time fixing formatting problems with posts then you should be in first/last post, HI, or possibly suggested edits. There is an edit option, yes, and it's for posts that seem extremely low quality, of such low quality that they may end up getting deleted, but that you can salvage, such as by taking a link only answer and incorporating the relevant section into a quote.
    – Servy
    Jun 22, 2017 at 14:54
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    @gnat But just because there is a way to edit posts in that queue doesn't mean it's wrong to mark a post as looking okay when it is very clearly an answer, doesn't merit deletion for any reason, but has some minor formatting problems. That would be true in any of the other queues I listed, because fixing such formatting problems is the goal of those queues, but not in LQP. The same is true of comments explaining problems with a post not significant enough to merit deletion; that's not what this queue is for.
    – Servy
    Jun 22, 2017 at 14:55
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    @gnat The formatting of the link is tiny. The real problem with the post is its lack of explanation, which you can't really fix with editing.
    – Servy
    Jun 22, 2017 at 15:00
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    @gnat Again, that's a good thing to do, in general, but it's not what that queue is there for. It's something that would be expected of a first post or a last post review, but the LQP queue isn't there to find and fix every problem with a post, it's there to determine if a post needs to be deleted or not. This post does not. Doing any more than that is certainly welcome, but not required. Note that if you did go above expectations and comment, then the correct course of action after doing so would still be to mark the post as okay.
    – Servy
    Jun 22, 2017 at 15:08
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    @gnat Here you can see the guidelines for using the queue in the FAQ. Note that it specifically says that the edit option isn't for minor edits; it's only for editing a post that's currently below the level of "acceptability" if you can edit to to be above that level. Making a link look a bit prettier doesn't fall into that category. Note it also specifically says that "looks okay" is the correct course of action for a post that's just wrong, or otherwise acceptable (i.e. not delete worthy) but still not a good answer.
    – Servy
    Jun 22, 2017 at 15:24
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    @gnat No. All of those actions are helpful (when warranted), and more than welcome, but not mandatory. There's a big difference. What's mandatory is that you delete things that merit deletion, and keep things that merit keeping. The rest is gravy.
    – Servy
    Jun 22, 2017 at 18:22

1 Answer 1

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From: What is the exact definition of “spam” for Stack Overflow?

What is Spam?

Spam is an unsolicited commercial advertisement. We've all seen it, and we all know what it looks like. It looks like the same stuff you see in your spam folder when you look at your email.

Spam exists solely to promote a product or service. For a post to be spam, it must not be an attempt to answer the question, and it must be unsolicited. If someone asks a question asking how to accomplish a task, and someone answers with a link to a product or service that accomplishes that task, that answer is not spam.

As for why this answer is technically an attempt to answer and should not have been converted to a comment by a moderator, I will direct you to: Your answer is in another castle: when is an answer not an answer?

Now the reason that this is a problem is that it has been deleted by a moderator so it can only be undeleted by someone with moderator powers. This is why moderators are usually reluctant to act in cases such as this, so I'm unsure as to why this moderator chose to take action in this case.

As for guidance reviewing in the LQPRQ (Low Quality Posts Review Queue), the best guidance I can give you is to read the answer/castle post I linked above, then read: You're doing it wrong: A plea for sanity in the Low Quality Posts queue.

Rest assured, you chose the correct action in this case.

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