Yeah its a software, lets just hope the user was a spammer and not one who liked the product, but with the history of spam I agree that its most probably spam.
@JanDvorak I don't fancy running a bot that doesn't focus on our primary goal. We already have Smokey with some useless noise commands and an experiment where Closey had some secondary commands didn't end-up well. We can't have nice things here. And using that bot in another room is just one-click away so I see no real need to run it here.
Guys. For those spam posts where they've tried to hide the url behind the punctuation - can you flag as "other" and explain it? If we happen to miss the comment (or if you forget to comment) we might end up incorrectly declining the flag.
Some of my "other" flags took days to be handled. it would be unacceptable to let spam live for that long. So what about a spam flag + other flag? Would it clear any confusion?
Is it possible to tell the names of the $_GET variables the page is waiting for? answered Apr 17 '12 at 0:25 by Jaspreet Chahal spam – Adriaan 1 hour ago declined - Just edit out the link!
@JonClements So wait, for new posts it's okay to spam flag? Why would there be confusion on old posts but not on newer ones? Some of the first handled posts looked very legit but were actually plagiarized and with a hidden punctuation link
@Magisch I did edit one yesterday because it was only a Twitter link, only after that was it found that it was plagiarized content and the user did it twice in a short time
@JonClements http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10183115/is-it-possible-to-tell-the-names-of-the-get-variables-the-page-is-waiting-for/10183482#10183482 that post
@JanDvorak This is a case I (and perhaps others) hadn't considered when promulgating the "don't edit spam" guidelines. In this case - where the spam is in punctuation - it probably is OK to edit it out. It's not going to get the OP many click (I had to edit the post to find out where the link was) and SE's "no follow" rules aren't going to get them any SEO "juice".
@ChrisF Are the number of flags cast for a post visible/very noticeable when reviewing the flags? If there are a bunch on a seemingly innocent post, it could be an indicator of punctuation/edited out spam
I think Ferry is posting a meta, the issue is fairly complex (maybe an edit and custom mod flag on high rep user...) but I still think the user is trying to spam breaking rule 1 and should be punished.
@JanDvorak If it's spam in the traditional sense of "click here for completely unrelated products" then leave the link in place for others and mods to see.
If it's the "link in punctuation" variety then editing out is valid. For example, it could be that the user normally links to their blog and edits it out when it's not relevant but forgot in this case.
there's a difference between "blatant spam for unrelated stuff" vs. "posting an on-topic answer, and sneaking in a promotional link" but the latter is clearly an attempt to game the system. I think we want to have a "no broken windows" policy here, just to dissuade the merely curious from trying to find ways to subvert policy.
I just feel that the user know what he is doing (not really since no-follow) and the attempt is to hide a SPAM link in the post (the only sense it has is to try to get better google result)
@JanDvorak Given that we have to sort the bags and need to take suitable precautions based on the colour of the bags that's not as unreasonable as you make it sound ;)
just editing it out is not enough. Posting spam deliberately (especially in the punctuation) is a malicious act against the interests of the community and the site. It should carry a heavy penalty.
One time spammer is still a spammer @Magisch - Not always. Sometimes a person might not know that he / she is spamming.. If the part of an answer contains here is my blog, I don't think that it is spam (unless the OP does it over and over again). It could be a genuine attempt to answer a question.
I'm just saying... answering is not worth it because there are no good questions, asking isn't worth it because creating an MVCE always reveals the issue and flagging isn't worth it because mods are inconsistent in what kind of flags they accept.
The simple answer to this all would be to allow optional free text for all flag types. And also a 'meh' instead of 'helpful'/'declined' status for when the flag was in good faith and usually right, but in this edge case, not helpful but not a bad flag either.
@Kyll I have the feeling the question could benefit from having the links, because the links also contain dates of the post, and the decision of the moderator who reviewed the post may be affected by that
@PetterFriberg - If the author is trolling, then marking it is spam is the right way to go. If the author is genuinely trying to answer a question by referring to his blog, its not spam IMHO. The hidden link does complicate things a little (could also have been a mistake. OP might have wanted to add it on a new line?) but I am with @ChrisF on this. This post doesn't really look like spam .
Especially since I (and probably most other users) don't want to click willy nilly on potential spam links.. which ends up being the major factor of whether or not it's spam
hey! Actually a decent question. And a non-answer within 60 seconds, and an answer based on a premise that contradicts the information given in the question.
@Tunaki The LEGOs just arrived at work, I'm going to spend the next few days playing with them. I'm going to prepare dungeons on large plates into which kids will have to move around and survive by coding their character "Move left, Push Button...", with LEGOs too.
I made a bug the other day which caused a hydraulic valve to get too warm, so it literally melted the plastic box where I kept it :) Melting bugs are real!