Context for Self-Promotion FAQ
As has already been pointed out, we have help/promotion in the FAQ. It might be worth adding some additional context, though. That FAQ was written to address promoting products or projects that are owned or maintained by the post author. Even when those products are relevant, the association with the author has caused some heartburn. That FAQ post was meant to help settle the issue. See: Limits for self-promotion in answers. I don't think that FAQ post really intended to cover an author's social media profile link.
Social media links are not a special case
It may help to reframe the question, because ultimately I don't care who the author of the linked content is. What matters is if it helps me to find an answer to the question. In this sense, social media links are not a special case. They should be treated as any other content. If an answer contains content that is clearly not relevant to the question, it is generally appropriate to edit out that content (i.e. "Thanks for reading!" or "I hope it helps!").
In /help/how-to-answer we have the following section:
Provide context for links
Links to external resources are encouraged, but please add context around the link so your fellow users will have some idea what it is and why it’s there. Always quote the most relevant part of an important link, in case the external resource is unreachable or goes permanently offline.
The corollary principle of "quote the most relevant part" would be that if there's nothing relevant enough to quote, then the link is suspect. For some questions, it may make sense to link to some general documentation, such as pointing a new practitioner to a technology's wiki (so long as it's not a link-only answer). In those cases, a quotation might not be necessary, but I'd still expect the author to explain how, specifically, the link would be useful in regards to the question.
Not all social media links are irrelevant
It takes a bit of wisdom to discern whether a social media link is appropriate and relevant. There's a spectrum. If the link points to a social media account that is highly specialized and relevant to the question, such as an account dedicated to SQL injection attack awareness where the question is about about that general topic, then it might be useful. If the social media account is very general and not especially relevant, such as a personal account containing recent vacation photos and only occasional technical posts on a wide variety of topics, then I'd edit it out.
Dealing with habitual insertion of irrelevant content
If a user is habitually adding irrelevant content to their posts, then you may want to gently correct that behavior in a comment. If the user persists or attempts to add that irrelevant content back to their posts, then a custom flag is appropriate. Avoid edit wars. Raise the post to a moderator's attention and leave.