The question asks how to do a specific thing. The answer recommends a package with a name sounding unmistakably like it will achieve what the asker is trying to do.
Is the answer great? No. Should it have more explanation and details added, ideally even sample code? Yeah, definitely. Are these shortcomings reason enough to downvote it? Yeah, that's why I suggested doing so. :-) But an answer being imperfect or not great is not sufficient grounds for it to be unilaterally deleted by a moderator.
There's no evidence that is spam. You did mention the theory, and I did check. I can't find any evidence it's spam, or even anything that smelled funny to me. Considering the account hasn't posted anything since that answer, that's not the type of behavior I would typically associate with a spammer. I also can't find any evidence that the answer is irrelevant or inapplicable to the question, which would be another hallmark of spam.
It seems like a good-faith answer that someone might find helpful. We don't have a rule against answers that suggest using a library/tool/package to solve a problem. We don't delete answers because the suggestion they gave later becomes deprecated. I'm not a subject-matter expert here, but I claim that doesn't matter. Moderators aren't expected to be subject-matter experts. Even if you could prove the answer was wrong/bad, that wouldn't be sufficient grounds for a moderator to delete it.
While reading this Meta question, I re-assessed the decision again, and I still came up with the same conclusion as I did when I declined the flag, and as the other moderator who declined the original NAA flag did. I even clicked through to the linked page, found this demo of the package, and confirmed that it does, in fact, work to detect when one clicks outside of a particular region. Which is exactly what the asker is trying to do. There's enough information in that post to help someone. Deleting it seems like it would be doing harm, not improving the site.
I really don't know what more explanation I can provide. This seems like a very clear-cut case of an imperfect answer that could justifiably be downvoted (or, better yet, edited and improved), but not one that can be justifiably flagged as "not an answer" or deleted by a moderator. It's fine to flag something because it smells funny ("might be spam"), but one really needs more reason than that to delete answers that appear, at least superficially, to be relevant to the question and good-faith attempts to answer the question.