I just failed this review audit. The answer was supposedly spam, but I'm not sure how I should be coming to that conclusion.
Reasons why I thought the answer wasn't spam:
- The answer is on-topic: the question asked for "Load More Posts on Page Scroll" on Wordpress, and the asker is already using Ajax, so a Wordpress plugin that uses Ajax to lazy load content seems like an on-topic answer.
- The answerer has no affiliation with the linked plugin, as far as I can tell.
- The only other time this answerer has referred to "Ajax Load More" is in a question about that plugin (which is reasonable, as the answerer evidently uses this plugin).
- The linked plugin is a "real" product (as far as I can tell), not someone's hobby GitHub repo.
- The answerer is not a spam account and has real questions and answers.
After failing the audit I tried to come up with reasons why one might think it's spam, but none are particularly convincing to me (yet):
- The plugin is supposedly not free after one template. But are all paid resources automatically spam? Certainly not right, as long as they're helpful, relevant, and without conflict of interest? At least the answerer did a good job disclosing that fact (which I can't find evidence of, on the plugin's webpage).
- The asker comments that they need a solution without plugins. However, this requirement isn't in the question itself so I can't fault the answerer.
- The question was low quality and was deleted. But how does that affect the quality of the answer?
- The answer has some grammatical issues... but poor grammar isn't an indication of spam.
Could someone help me understand what makes this answer spam?
This is not a duplicate of this question because that instance was primarily about "illegitimate self-promotion" (and secondarily about plagiarism). Neither of those issues apply to my question.