I recently ran into a question with the [three.js] tag that asked for help with a 3D globe randomly disappearing. This question had a link to a working demo with the problem, and the code showing the relevant segment. Links to working demos are allowed, and even encouraged in the how-to-ask page:
If it is possible to create a live example of the problem that you can link to (for example, on http://sqlfiddle.com/ or http://jsbin.com/) then do so - but also copy the code into the question itself.
As far as I can tell this question did exactly that. The link shows the 3D globe that disappears, effectively demonstrating the problem. However, the edit history (screenshot below) shows that the link was removed multiple times without explanation. The OP attempted to add it back, only for it to be removed again:
After the second removal of the link, the account was suspended for "promotional content".
My question is, what is considered "promotional content"? The link was hireabadass.com, which isn't a business or spam, it's literally just a demo of the 3D globe referenced in the original question. I understand it could sound like a recruiting service, but immediately after opening it's evident that's not the case. How can this account be suspended for 7 days for promotional content, when it was just following the "live example you can link to" suggestion?
const camera = new THREE.PerspectiveCamera(75, window.innerWidth / window.innerHeight, 0.01, 1000);
It would've been silly to copy the entire program, when only the suspected culprit would suffice.