@gparyani I don't think that's unreasonable. It's at least as public as other information on a deleted post. However, you should be aware that the specific answer which was linked in that meta question was subsequently undeleted and quickly re-deleted by a moderator (I don't know why). Thus, the actual deletion banner no longer says that it was deleted by Community. If you want a screenshot of that banner, you'll either need to find another example or get it from someone who has the answer open in a tab and is willing to change the DOM such that it's not hidden, as the re-deletion causes the deleted post to be behind the normal deletion fade and "This post has been deleted" banner, just like a normal deletion does.
@Marco Yes, both moderators and users with the access to moderator tools privilege can see deleted posts. The exception to this are posts that have been removed for some limited specific reasons (e.g., DMCA takedowns).
I just visited VonC's profile and saw this:
This account is temporarily suspended for posting inaccurate AI content or plagiarism. The suspension period ends in 5 days.
Can someone elaborate on what post(s) warranted the suspension? I am not sure if I am asking at the right place but I saw this...
@Makyen I wasn't referring to the banner - there's already a quoted copy of that on a global meta post - but the timeline entry, which will stay there even if the form of deletion is later changed.
As you feel it's reasonable, can you please tell me what the timeline note is for the Community user deletion event on that answer?
@Marco I respectfully disagree, and I actually think it should be deleted. It's been made abundantly clear, multiple times over, that mods are not going to comment further on the specifics requested in that post.
@gparyani Unfortunately, no, as I don't know if there's a difference between what's shown to a moderator than what is shown to non-moderators in this instance.
@Makyen Okay. In that case, can a non-mod with 10k+ rep please tell me what the annotation for the Community user deletion entry in the timeline is for the answer linked here?
Also, @Makyen RE your comments on this post, I think it's probably a good idea to have an official written policy for third-party appeals of suspensions.
There was one case on Meta.SE where it proved helpful. A user had posted an image in chat, which was a benign image in and of itself, but the website owner had set their site up so hotlinking their images from other sites would display an NSFW image instead of the real one, which they did so deliberately to get people banned from sites on which they hotlink their images.
@gparyani That's not unreasonable. As far as I'm aware, both the company and moderators take suspensions very seriously. We definitely care about getting it right and certainly don't want anyone suspended erroneously. On the other hand, we don't want thousands of people inquiring about any particular suspension, but, as far as I know, such inquiries have never been made in bulk. Such inquiries do happen from time to time in limited numbers.
The user legitimately couldn't tell what was going on since their browser had cached the intended SFW image, so for them it showed that instead of the NSFW image in their hotlinked embeds, and so they made an appeal on the site calling out mods for being unreasonable for chat-suspending them for posting a perfectly SFW image. The mods incorrectly took that as blatant trolling, and suspended them on the main site.
Then I went and did the research and found out that the site deliberately serves NSFW images if the Referer doesn't match the site, and showed that evidence to the mods, and they then unsuspended the user on the site and chat.
There are other cases that can happen, such as if a suspended user contacts another user off-site and asks them to pass on a message to the mods.
@gparyani As with most things that involve users, raising a "in need of moderator intervention" flag and explaining the situation seems like the correct course of action.