I see it happen, mostly in community groups and such. I have a feeling their detection methods are focused more on broad exposure but that's not where the problem happens. In a neighborhood group with a few thousand members, it's not uncommon for an event announcement or a lost dog post to get about the same number of shares. I imagine that's a bit harder to pick out the scams from the legitimate stuff at that level.
Is it really so bad?
I was speculating here https://stacker.news/items/756409/r/dtonon?commentId=757681 that they have some AI to check potential abusive edits when the context requires it (great exposure and many responses/reactions already recorded).
Maybe I overestimated these big tech circuses.
Btw, I agree, delete and delayed sending is everything we need.
Discussion
I see!