I've recently seen a user who keeps answering multiple questions with jiberish only to then instantly delete them. Then, if said user knows an answer to the question, the post is edited with an actual answer and is then undeleted hence marking it as the first answer to the question. If not, then the deleted post remains deleted.
This is an obvious attempt to get more attention from other answers, since answers are ordered by submission date (after accept/up-vote status). While it might not have any great impact overall, I believe any unsportsmanlike behavior is worthy of discussion. Not only is this unfair towards other answerers, but arguably also abusive towards the post edit/delete system.
I'm guessing the right thing to do here is to just flag and move on.
However, with only a small subset of the community being able to see deleted answers, and with an even smaller subset having mod-tools, this might be difficult to detect/prevent. This wouldn't be an issue if undeleteing an answer updated the submission date to the current date. Perhaps a change worth considering?
However, there appears to be a way to abuse the system even further. If the (deleted) jibberish post is replaced with anything that even resembles an answer to the question within the 5-minute grace period, the jibberish bit will not show up in the edit history but will instead look like an genuine answer. This opens up the possibility for more misconduct.
For example:
[12:00:00]
- Question is posted[12:00:05]
- User A posts an answer with nonsense in the body.[12:00:06]
- User A deletes the answer.[12:04:00]
- User B posts a good answer.[12:04:30]
- User A copies User B's answer and pastes it into their own (deleted) answer.[12:04:31]
- User A undeletes their answer.
Not only will A's answer appear at the top, but User B will appear to have plagiarized A's answer!
Perhaps this isn't an issue until it becomes one (I haven't seen this happen), but I thought I'd bring this up anyway...
Opinions?
I don't think this question is a duplicate of Placeholder Answers: Will update with answer soon!, since it is about posting placeholder answers, but that ultimately have good intentions. This topic leans more towards the abusive side of this behavior, for example to steal someone else's code and claim it as your own without mods being able to prove otherwise.