In the Low Quality Posts queue, this answer was used as an audit question, despite it obviously being a legitimate answer. Even worse, it was deleted by Community Bot as "spam or offensive content" 13 days ago, after being on the site for nearly 7 months.
Edit to add:
apparently there are many differing opinions about this subject. Here is a meta post that states:
Based on what we've decided in this question, I have updated the /faq on all sites to make it policy
Reading the policy that follows, we find this:
Post good, relevant answers, and if they happen to be about your product, so be it
It sounds like self-promotion alone is not sufficient for a post to be considered spam.
Could there be some other reason to classify this post as "Low Quality"?? My understanding (and please, correct me if this is wrong) is that the purpose of the LQP queue is to filter out posts that make no attempt to answer the question, or that are hopelessly unclear and cannot be salvaged. The post in question is unarguably an attempt to answer. Could it be better? Yes, absolutely. But is it so bad that it:
does not address the question at all or is incomprehensible
??? The code snippet is easy to understand and the suggested solution is apparent enough. This answer is at least passable; it ticks all of the boxes. The only potential problem is this:
you must disclose your affiliation with the product in your answers
Perhaps that alone is enough to justify deletion (even though it could be addressed through less aggressive means), but it's not clear from the post that the person answering is affiliated with the package being promoted. It's not even clear by following the link. It seems unlikely that this was the reason the question was originally removed.
So were left with the task of deciding if this answer is "Low Quality". Based on the content alone, it fails to meet the specifically enumerated criteria. And while it is self-promoting, that can only be discovered by clicking through and closely examining multiple external websites, all of which are commonly used to host legitimate software libraries. Finally, even if you succeed in uncovering this issue, nowhere does it say that it should be cause for deletion, nor is there an option listed in the "Recommend Deletion" dialog that is even remotely close to describing this situation.
This is not a duplicate
This question is being flagged as a duplicate, but it is not. That post is about an answer that was promoting commercial software, which is very clear just by reading the post. That is not the case here.
Edit (Another Example, 2022-07-07):
I'll not create a new question for this, since it won't be well received, but this is another example of a very bad audit question:
https://stackoverflow.com/review/low-quality-posts/32191796
The post is a legitimate attempt to answer the question. It is not a "link only", although it includes a link, and the linked site does indeed provide more information. The author may or may not be affiliated with the linked site, but the fact is that if the link were removed, the post would incontrovertibly be not spam. How can a link to a document that appears to be fully relevant and is in no way misleading change a valid answer to spam???