Review audits with dangerous links such as this one should be completely removed.
Links like this are dangerous and shouldn't be used for audits.
Or the links should be [redacted]
or they shouldn't lead to anything.
Review audits with dangerous links such as this one should be completely removed.
Links like this are dangerous and shouldn't be used for audits.
Or the links should be [redacted]
or they shouldn't lead to anything.
Recognizing dangerous/spam links is a substantial part of the job of someone that's reviewing. Part of the goal of reviewing is to find such links and remove the content from the site, so those posts harm fewer people. I don't really see how removing/masking the links in audits helps determine that people are doing that job. Obviously, there's no way for such links to be removed/masked from non-audits, so why should they be removed from audits?
If you feel it would be necessary to go to a link in order to determine the appropriate review action, but you are uncomfortable going to a potentially dangerous link, then your best course of action is to "skip" any reviews where you feel you'd need to visit the link in order to make a determination of which action to take. Even if that means you skip every single review which isn't obviously OK, your reviews are still beneficial to the site.
Personally, I have an isolated environment set up specifically so I can investigate such potentially dangerous links. Setting that up was a choice I made in order to be able to more accurately review posts. However, I'm heavily involved with Charcoal and SmokeDetector, which are specifically looking for spam. I understand that not everyone will make the choice to set up such an environment, but that just means they should "skip" reviews where they feel they would need such an environment to be comfortable reviewing the current post.
Note that even if I wasn't involved with Charcoal/SmokeDetector, I'd still want to have such an environment, as there are a lot of links we encounter in the regular use of the internet which are potentially dangerous. It's nice to have available a way to test such links.
For the specific example you provided, the reviewer should be able to tell that this example post is spam without needing to investigate the links further. In other words, in this case, and many cases, you should be able to accurately determine the correct review action without needing to actually go to the link in the post. Needing to go to the link is usually only necessary in cases where it's not obvious one way or the other what the link is pointing to.
href
-value of all links in review audits to, say,https://example.org
.They would look just like before but clicking on them is safe. – leonheess Jan 6 '20 at 17:40