Should I do something if my my NAA flag on a non-answer is still pending but the LQP review was invalidated after author deleted/undeleted it? It's still visible to mods, isn't it?
Thankfully, deletion and undeletion by the OP doesn't seem to invalidate NAA flags. I would not have been willing to bet money on that, though, without checking first, so it's a fair question.
@CodyGray I didn't pay attention this time, but it could be that it's marked helpful if it's been deleted for some time and then becomes pending again once it's been undeleted by OP, but I'm not sure. Still, it's interesting that the OP can relatively easily invalidate reviews.
I thought that any deletion of a post would automatically mark NAA flags as helpful. At least, I've had more than a few such flags marked thus because of OP deleting.
@JeanneDark Yes, this is what happens when the OP deletes the post. The behavior was changed to this some time back to cover these exact types of situations.
It's a comment to a question which was a homework dump. Literally "write a class that does this, and that, and the other thing". Somebody asked what specific problem the asker had. And you see the response.
The Q is already closed. There is also a link to "How do I ask homework questions" posted.
For the last spam flag I posted the spam link was added in by another user. I'll raise a custom mod flag because at least two people approved that spam
@HenryEcker Intertestingly, one of the users info pages claims to be in Quebec. The other user's info is that they study in an university which is in Quebec
Hmm. What to do about this suggested edit. In itself - although very minor - it's OK. However, the original text is possibly plagiarized: the first paragraph is much the same as the "How it works" text here.
^ I used the word "original" in quite a loose sense :)
However, the author of the original Tag Wiki is also a contributor to the GitHub project I linked. Does that make it OK?
@cigien Very relevant. I can see no mention of the fact that they may be the author of both (even in edit summaries). In fact, it took me until my third post (above) to even discover that ... which is exactly what #2 and the last paragraph are about in your linked post.