Ever since I came back from my short-term review ban, I was paying extra attention to what and how to review. Whenever unsure, I could hit Skip for several times in a row, as wise people prescribe, and for a reason. Lessons learned and this way I was able to review ~60 posts every day for two weeks, flagging and editing posts.
Previously, I also came here with a question, related to link-only answers from SDK/framework answers. I expressed my thoughts on how uncertain that particular case of link-only answers may sometimes be, and received both support and sometimes criticism in the comments, meaning that the issue is disputed, but overall positive score.
And here's another trap I have gotten in:
https://stackoverflow.com/review/first-posts/18368616
It took me around 30 seconds to decide in favor of No Action Needed, and... I'm review-banned again.
Ironically, someone else got in trouble just right after me, having suggested the same solution:
He is probably banned, too.
And I'm here to dispute this audit and discuss yet another case of link-containing answers.
Reasoning
This question is marked as duplicate of the following:
Failed and banned for user who answered the question correctly?
In the comments, @gnat gives the following reference, stating that it applies to the present topic:
You are expected to take some time to help guide a new user in the first posts review. Clicking 'no action needed' reinforces bad habits when they are there (and doesn't reinforce good ones when they are present with an up vote). You have 20 reviews per day for this queue - it's not a race to get through them. Spending less than 10 seconds per review is not the focus of this review queue.
If this is really the connection point, then it's premature to establish the connection, because it is based on an unproved presumption that I encourage bad habits. I'm here to explain that I don't.
Reflecting the Audit
Above you see the screenshot of the answer in audit.
Yes, it contains multiple links.
Yes, it doesn't contain any code.
But NO — it's more than just a link-only answer. It has suggestions, considerations and multiple links backed with reason, linked together in one context, which address the question. For good's sake, it's not just one abandoned link, it shows interest and effort.
This rule:
If the link expires, answer makes no sense
has very vague, slippery ground. Technologies evolve with time, and render obsolete. So, don't discuss them? If you have question which addresses language of specific version, it may well be no longer actual in a couple of years when a new version comes out. So what is the difference?
It is there. Yes, link-only answers should be converted to comments. But this answer is truly a borderline case. It's not just one link and nothing else. As I mentioned above, it has more effort, wider embrace, which results in a post a user could potentially gather wider outlook with. There are three different links, sensibly/contextually connected.
On specific "link-only" case, I strongly encourage everyone to also read this question, where I deepen the reasoning why deleting some of such answers is bad:
Link answers from framework/SDK/tool authors which address the problem
As pointed out in that question, this Delete-first mentality leads to clearing the site from potentially helpful posts. Some cases are disputed, that's true – and this no exception – but can you in all sincerity tell that a particular question is better off without deleted answer? I fail to see this to be the case.
I may have been better skipped this audit, that's also true, but even having failed it, — I did not due to lack of attention, and therefore hoping for some support, with respect to SO community and adopted review audit rules.
<Vague term>
problem. That's similar to this other<vague term>
". That's not helpful at all.