A couple of weeks ago, @dbc asked, In "Low Quality Posts" is it required to cross-check external links with profile pages to identify Improper Self Promotion?, to which I responded with my process for evaluating spam. As part of that, I noted:
Note: This may require clicking through to e.g. source code for a library. This can be hard to spot if they're just using e.g. an import statement or package reference.
That last bit about import
statements or package references seemed a bit fussy at the time, and I considered removing it. Since then, however, I've seen a couple of cases of exactly that.
The most overt example was an answer that was clearly promoting their own library. In another (now deleted) post, I warned the contributor about the self-promotion policy. In response, they edited their answer to remove the affiliation, and simply referenced their library via an import statement:
import numpy as np import fastfinance as ff …
This is obviously a bit sloppy as that import
is going to fail without first downloading the library via e.g. pip
. And, regardless, the contributor hadn't packaged or registered their library on the PyPI. But, if they had, and I wasn't aware of the previous edit, would I have recognized something like the following as self-promotion?
First, run the following at your CLI:
pip install fastfinance
And then, add this to your code:
import numy as np import fastfinance as ff …
I doubt it.
This makes me wonder, in the spirit of @dbc's previous question, in "Low Quality Answers", should we cross-check package references to identify Improper Self Promotion?
I.e., should we see something like:
pip install somelibrary
or:
npm i somelibrary
as just as suspicious as:
First, download
somelibrary
…
This isn't something I generally do, unless there are other obvious concerns, but now I wonder if this should be standard practice for package references in the Low Quality Answers queue.