I failed this audit. The system said the answer was spam.
Can somebody explain why this answer was deleted as spam? I'm not familiar with awk, cut, or sed, but their tag info looks suitable for POSIX questions.
I failed this audit. The system said the answer was spam.
Can somebody explain why this answer was deleted as spam? I'm not familiar with awk, cut, or sed, but their tag info looks suitable for POSIX questions.
The post itself is not spam.
A moderator flagged the post as spam because it was posted by a known troll account, and the moderator wanted to apply the system-level spam penalties to that account.
Unfortunately, the spam flag also made the system believe that the post itself was spam, and thus the system started using it as a review audit for unsuspecting users, such as yourself. That was a mistake. Sam has now corrected that mistake.
However…it's not a good answer, and "Looks OK" was still the wrong decision in review. Why? Look again. The question asks for a way to get the numeric version of the timezone (by which is meant, the offset from UTC). The answer essentially says, "You can get and parse it yourself using a tool." This is not a useful answer. The answer itself does not contain the solution to the problem. (How do I use that tool to parse it?)
Any action other than "Looks OK" would have been appropriate—editing, recommending deletion or skipping. If you weren't sure because you don't have much knowledge about POSIX shell utilities, then "Skip" would have been a good choice. It is always the safe choice.
To add to Cody Gray ♦'s answer I would also offer the following advice:
In the Low Quality Posts review queue it's very useful (to the extent that I do it almost all of the time before selecting "Looks OK") to follow the link
link on the right to see the answer in context. It might be a copy-paste duplicate of an existing answer that a user has plagiarised to parasitically gain reputation that the original post might have received, say.
Had you followed the link you'd have seen that the answer was deleted, which would have alerted you to something fishy happening.
A lot of LQPRQ audits (that I come across, at least) are posts from deleted users, due to the way that they are selected. This is a massive giveaway - the user is deleted, despite the post being only five days old when you performed the review:
Knowing all this, you have the options of:
You ended up doing a combination of 1) and 3) - and failed the audit.
Presumably since you've not mentioned it in your answer you've not also been given a temporary automatic review ban - which is something, at least.