python This older question got linked from a more recent one: stackoverflow.com/q/53641032/1394393. I'm inclined to think it out to be closed as Too Broad, as it's essentially asking a question about every possible module that could become commonplace. It just doesn't seem like a good question for SO. But I'm interested in a second opinion before I cast a vote.
@PetterFriberg Yeah, first one's still on the second page in the Java tag and the first page in the C++ tag though - it's still pretty visible (even though it's downvoted and closed)
@Makyen: this deleted answer has been wrongly categorised as spam, when in fact is was an NAA attempt to reply to another answer: stackoverflow.com/a/56324369/472495. Does that matter?
(In other words, does the spam flag hurt them in a way that NAA would not?)
@halfer That answer was deleted by a moderator normally, but with the spam flags not cleared. In such case, there is no penalty, but the content is still hidden behind the spam/R/A click-through to the hidden content. There is only a penalty if the post is actually deleted as spam. If it is deleted as spam, then it will be deleted and locked by the Community user.
@Makyen The lack of quote formatting caused me to miscategorise it initially, and I thought it would be helpful to any spam/NAA discussion to clarify it. It's deleted, so the edit does no harm
@StephenKennedy That's only if Community deletes it
I think
So if a non-Community mod deletes it and validates spam flags, that doesn't carry the penalty, but leaves the "this post was marked as spam" warning. If a mod flags as spam, that's a binding flag that causes Community to delete and give the -100 rep penalty
@Zoe That's correct. If it's deleted as actual spam, then, yes, it shows as having been deleted by Community and locked by Community. Here is an example of a post that was deleted by a moderator with a spam flag (>10k rep required). cc @halfer
@EJoshuaS you find them, edit them into shape, hopefully they get undeleted and you're set. More realistically: you get a new question every 6 months, regardless of your ban. Then when that question is well received, the ban slowly diminishes. If the new question is bad on the other hand, it's immediately back to 6 months of nothing, and then a single question again and again until the end of time (or you manage to ask enough good questions to never hit the ban again)
Just FYI: At the moment, it appears the SE API is much slower than normal to update its data. This results in the URRS showing status information that is out of date, for at least some posts, by up to a couple/few minutes. It also affects the Archiver, which may not detect some requests as complete, if the request has very recently been completed (e.g. very recently closed).
@Shree That post was undeleted by a moderator who, then edited it. The portion removed does not appear to actually be part of the answer, more meta information. That edit doesn't really look like it's removing pertinent information to me.
Hypothetically, if I find a user who has only two questions and both are blatantly off-topic (but not spam), both posted three weeks ago, and one of them even has an upvote and an answer, what should I do?
@Machavity Hmmm... I'm not too surprised at that being a symptom. One of the posts I saw with significantly delayed SE API data update was one that was deleted. The SE API continued to return data for the post for a considerable time after it was deleted. Normally, a deleted post immediately returns no data from the SE API. Getting no data is actually how you have to detect deletion.
@AndrewMyers flag them? What else do you need to do? Check when the upvotes were cast from the post's timeline. If they were cast the same day, a mod-flag might be a good idea.
@AndrewMyers Vote/flag to close. I'd probably downvote (which will cause the one with no upvote and no answer to be Roomba'd in a week). I might consider a cv-pls on the one that has an answer, but 3 weeks is a bit old for a cv-pls. I would not mod-flag. There is, however, the general user-targeting issue, but that will depend mostly on how you found these questions and why you know that the user only has two questions (implies that you went to their profile to look for other posts).
I asked a question which was a mistake from my end (code wise), admitted this directly after people commented about certain things. Unfortunately I cannot delete the question since there's an answer on it. But I keep getting downvotes, even after it was already put on hold and a day later. Is there a way this question can be deleted or closed? stackoverflow.com/questions/56317234/…
@halfer but why was it put on 'on hold', since I explained in the comments that it was mistake from my end, shouldnt it be closed? "On hold" implies I might make an edit, but this was not the case. Or am I seeing it completely wrong? I'm not too updated about the rules on SO, apologies.
@Erfan It was closed as "unclear", but the comments indicate that given it was a trivial error in retrospect, it could now be closed as "typo/unreproducible". So, it is probably OK that it is closed.
(Closed/on-hold are the same thing here - the latter was conceived as a kinder way of putting it).
I think a 20k user could start a vote to delete on it, but I am not a 20k user, so could not say.
I see, thanks for the explanation. Wish it was just deleted since there's no value in this question and seeing the minus points come in just feels like Im being punished for making a mistake, while I spend daily free time here helping people.
@Erfan I agree a tiny bit, but I think you are worrying too much. You're a millionaire whose day was ruined by accidentally dropping some coins into a drain :=p
(For what it is worth, I tend not to recommend complaining about votes in the comments, and definitely don't edit such complaints into posts - that tends to attract more downvotes!)