A non-answer that was deleted from review was undeleted by the OP without any change. Should it be flagged again (if so which flag) or just left alone? stackoverflow.com/a/77734519
@cottontail You can reflag or mod flag if you want. There's an autoflag "Disputed low quality review" when that happens so it'll get handled eventually even if you do nothing.
Could this answer be justifiably flagged as plagiarism (of this one)? Or is it a "Thanks" NAA? It strikes me as inappropriate that the poster should have earned > 500 Invisible Unicorn Points from it.
@KenWhite I agree it's not spam given the question but the question shouldn't be there and now can be deleted
@AdrianMole the second and fourth answer would also be plagiarism in that case. The fourth one was added 7 years later and still got more upvotes than almost every answer I've written :(
I'd avoid plagiarism flags unless you can specifically and clearly indicate that the user copied the content of someone else without attribution (plagiarism). If it's a very simple straightforward answer that could conceivably been created independently then plagiarism is not the correct flag.
But seeing someone get 500 rep for a "Thanks" NAA puts wrinkles in parts of my body that really shouldn't have wrinkles. A simple deletion from LQA won't remove that rep.
@AdrianMole The original question was off-topic, as it was asking about where to get a download of the product because the site was off-line. The product author or rep answered that with a notice that the site would be put back up. Then, nearly five years later, the author/rep posted nothing but a notice about a new version of the product. That's nothing but a product announcement and effort to promote that product, which fits into the specific definition of spam for this site.
@AdrianMole How can you disagree? The post clearly does nothing but advertise the release of a new version of the product. There is no other content in the answer. How is that NOT spam?
@KenWhite I'm not sure I agree with you that it fits the definition of spam for this site. They disclose their affiliation to the product. That is a question about where to download that specific product and the download URL appears to have changed from https://my.nps.edu/web/moves/X3D-Edit/netbeans_modules to https://savage.nps.edu/X3D-Edit/ between versions.
As far as I can see it isn't unrelated promotion and it discloses affiliation.
@AdrianMole Questions about USE of tools used primarily by programmers are appropriate. Questions about where to find such a product or what product should be used are not, and neither are posts announcing new versions of programmers tools.
@HenryEcker That changes nothing. It does not answer the question asked (which was off-topic anyway), was made nearly five years later, and does nothing but promote the new version of the product. At the very least, it's NAA, but it's spam by any definition.
@KenWhite I really don't understand what you mean by "that changes nothing." Self-promotion is specifically allowed on Stack Overflow as long as there is disclosure and not excessive. That's a question about the product. The download location changed in a new version. That's objectively a correct answer to that question. If a different user who was unaffiliated with the product posted that link which answers the question would you've flagged that as spam too?
I agree they probably should've just made an edit to their previous answer, but I don't agree that it fits the definition of spam since it aligns with all of our how not to be a spammer guidance.
@HenryEcker I strongly disagree. The "answer" does not answer anything. It simply exists to promote that new version. Clearly it is not just to provide a new download source, because the site was down nearly five years ago, and just as clearly has not been down this entire time thus requiring the answerer to provide a new link. It's a promotion of that product.
It's no different than someone from any software publisher going around to all the old questions about their product and adding a new answer to them, announcing the release of a new version of that software. The link you provided refers to frequent advertising of your software in answers. It does not indicate that posts that do nothing but promote that product are acceptable.
I don't think we're going to agree here which is fine. I will say I do disagree with "just as clearly has not been down this entire time" since the links in the question are still down today. I can't find any evidence to support that those links were ever fixed before the new release. Archive.org lost sight of it 5 years ago as well.
@HenryEcker You're right. :-) I withdrew my flag, as it was pretty clear from your response here that it was going to be declined. I still don't agree, but I can see when I can't win, and can admit defeat.
Maybe a little off-topic (sorry), but I couldn't find the current handling of chat GPT answers on Meta. Could anyone give me a up-to-date link? Should I flag that answer (with what reason)?
Should this kind of answer be deleted? It reposts the obvious in a spamish way :P The profile also links to an off-site resource, so this might be a publicity profile?!
@bad_coder Yes, the first link looks to be an unattributed link to the OP's own site. Why not first flag it, either as "spam" or perhaps better as a custom flag, since it may not be obvious why it is sort-of spammy.
@dur I don't know what the canonical answer might be, or if there even is a canonical answer, but I've usually used a custom flag stating my suspicion and the reason for my suspicion. When I see this, it usually involves multiple answers, all created within a short time of each other (additional evidence) and I include links to these in the custom flag.
@dur: I will also add that while most of these flags are accepted as "helpful" they are among the slowest flags to see a response to, as I imagine most custom flags would be.
@bad_coder: If the R/A stuff can be edited out of the question, and the question is decent, then that's what I'd do. If they get involved in an edit war, then it's time to get moderators involved.
@HovercraftFullOfEels @EJoshuaS-StandwithUkraine thanks for the edit, it was better in this instance that I didn't do it. Anyway after 2k or 3k closed Qs on that tag an incident like this was bound to happen eventually.
@KenWhite for the record, I was intentionally not handling the flag. I certainly see your perspective and was willing to let someone else handle it with fresh eyes. I also want to be as clear as possible, that I think that an answer like that would be spam on almost literally any other question.
@HenryEcker I know you were steering clear of my flag. If I implied that I thought otherwise, I apologize for any misunderstanding. I'm glad we agree that answers of that type under other circumstances are inappropriate. I can live with not being in agreement on that single answer. :-)