The question was treated as a spam seed.
In about an hour, the user who authored the question posted 4 spam-like answers, 3 of them near-duplicates, none of them more than link-only, all linking to the same site, which is not an official AWS source (i.e. the domain was registered on 2021-09-26, isn't registered to Amazon, and is using privacy to not disclose the owner(s)). One of those answers was on the off-topic, resource-request question which your review task was about. I treated the question as a spam seed, as the user rapidly posting 4 very similar answers on only marginally related questions indicates that their intent was to spam the information about that site, which makes their question look a lot like a spam seed.
While the question is a reasonable audit, it's not a reasonable audit as spam. In order to remove the question from the audit pool, it was undeleted and re-deleted as rude/abusive, which prevents it from being used as an audit.
Ignoring the spam aspects, "Looks OK" wasn't correct.
You responded to that audit with "Looks OK". That's not a correct response for that question (ignoring the spam seed issue). The question is clearly and explicitly asking for an off-site resource. Such questions are off-topic and should be closed. There's an exception to that, in that questions asking for an official source for a programming related resource are permitted. That question was definitely not asking for an official source. While it might have been edited to be asking for an official source, or even better to ask how to use and API to obtain that information, obtaining an official source was definitely not the question author's intent, given that they posted an answer with a non-official source.
[Note: I'm intentionally not saying that the question would be on-topic if it was asking for an official source for the information which it is requesting. IMO, the topicality of a question asking for an official source for that information would be debatable, as the information which the question is asking for really isn't programming related, it's entirely about in what geographical/geopolitical regions AWS is offering specific services, which is deployment, not really programming, IMO.]