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08:10
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A: "Too minor" edits - better to leave poor quality on the site?

Servy Is this an issue that we just don't want to give rep to someone who improves the quality of the site, but only by a little? Not really. Maybe just a touch, but it's pretty far down on the list of problems with too minor edits. Here are some much more important issues: It consumes a lot ...

Servy, I'm glad we agree today after disagreeing yesterday. I'm not breaking "our" guidelines by doing what I think improves the site - its more linked to the reviewing cycle, and teaching the newer guys how the game works.
@Servy: pp. 1-3 do not exist if a user have enough rep to edit. p.4 could be dealt programmatically -- if it is hard to detect minor edits automatically then add a check box: [x] - minor edit (no bump to front page).
-1. Your point 3 kind of doesn't matter since the suggested edit queue never gets long. Point 2 only really applies to recently posted questions, and could be fixed by just not allowing suggestions until an hour after a post is created. Point 1 I also disagree with; small grammar and formatting changes can be reviewed pretty much at a glance, without even needing to read the entire post, whereas more substantial changes require many minutes to review properly and require that the reviewer understand the post. The reviewer/editor effort ratio is better for minor edits, not worse.
One also could provide the minor edit checkbox only to users with enough reputation (basically creating a "minor edit" priviledge). To avoid someone misusing it, one could say that a certain proportion of minor edits still get bumped (say, about 5% of them), and use of that feature is limited to a certain number of minor edits per day. Also, there could be separate lists of minor edits available to moderators (or even to everyone who can flag posts), so that explicit checking for abusive minor edits could be done. without affecting the front page.
@J.F.Sebastian I specifically said, in my answer, that 1-3 don't apply to users with editing privileges, which is why it's not nearly as problematic for such users to make minor edits. An option for suggesting "minor edits" has been made many times before. It has always been rejected.
@celtschk If you're going to draw attention to minor edits, and require people to be spending a bunch of time checking them for abuse, then your proposed system isn't succeeding in its attempt to avoid consuming the time of others. Either that time is spent checking the edits, and thus not spent on other activities, or it's not, and there is the potential for abuse. You don't get both.
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@Servy: With a separate list, everyone could decide for himself whether he wants to take time checking minor edits (and unlike review, there would be no queue to work up, but just a list). I'd expect actual abuse to be negligible anyway; but the extra list should satisfy also the paranoid. Also the assumption that the time spent on checking minor edits would otherwise have been spent on other activities on the network is just a guess.
@celtschk What makes you think the abuse would be lower? The suggested edits queue already sees a fair bit of abuse. If you provide ways of making it easier for a suggested edit to get through (less reviewers, reviewers who aren't paying as much attention, reviewers who aren't as interested in the editing guidelines, etc.) they'll absolutely shove it through that queue. You'll see spam/vandalism going through that queue, regular edits by people who just want less reviewers for a greater shot at approval, people who just don't know the difference between the two options, etc.
@Servy: And how many of those are from high reputation members? (Ah, I notice now that you speak about "suggested edits". Those who only can suggest edits certainly would not have the necessary reputation to mark changes as minor.)
@celtschk High rep users don't suggest edits at all. Their edits do not need to be reviewed. This is why I stated, in my answer, that it's not nearly as problematic for higher reputation users to be making minor edits. It can be a problem in a few situations (mass re-tagging, for example, can become disruptive) but it largely is not, when editing naturally.
@Servy: I didn't say they suggest edits. The problem which was noted for high-rep users was that it bumps the question. A minor-edit checkbox could avoid that.
@celtschk If you add that then yes, you'll see abuse. You'll find spammers given the motivation to get enough reputation to edit posts without anyone being notified, there are cases (granted, somewhat rare, but still) in which people get mad at each other and vandalize each others' posts, there are people that make edits that they think are minor but are in fact wrong (this is particularly relevant with respect to code; fixing a misspelled word has significant consequences, meriting the attention to the edit, when it's editing code) etc. You'll also see more abuse if you remove these checks.
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@Servy: Somehow in every single comment you ignore some part of my suggestion. But I've now decided to not waste my time further with arguing about it.
mcv
mcv
Your first point makes no sense. Reviewing an edit takes more time than making the edit? I admit I don't know how the review system works, but surely it takes less time if someone else has already found what needs to be fixed about a post, rather than to have the reviewers read all the posts themselves and figure out what needs to be fixed?
@mcv If there was only one reviewer, possibly, but even that isn't often going to be the case for edits this minor. In many cases the reviewer is going to take the time to go and actually fix up the post, doing everything that the editor should have done to begin with. That can easily consume more time. They'll also be spending time looking through the posts to see what else might need fixing, which, again, can be much more time than the editor if they're only fixing the first thing they saw. Finally, and most importantly, there are 3-5 reviewers of a post, not just one.
mcv
mcv
@Servy So is editing a lost cause, then? If what you say is true, they're going to examine the entire post anyway. That, or it's going to remain unfixed. Both options are apparently undesirable. So how about the reviewer just reviews the edit, and lets the editing to the non-reviewers?
@mcv Editing isn't a lost cause, but people suggesting edits should be taking the time to make substantive, worthwhile edits, so that they are actually contributing more to the site than they are drawing from it. When people take the time to really make a good edit, that tends to happen. When people go around fiddling with tangential tags, or mass-editing a common typo, it doesn't.
mcv
mcv
@Servy So small edits are not worthwhile? What if the post is mostly fine, but there's one or two glaring spelling errors. Should those not be fixed? Should the editor invent unnecessary edits to make his edit more substantive? Maybe it would be a better idea to allow reviewers to revoke edit privileges when editors do a particularly sloppy job.
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@mcv Such small edits can simply be made by people who have the ability to edit posts without requiring a detailed review process. They do the vast majority of editing anyway. You seem to think that all/most edits come from suggested edits. They don't. If an editor can find a way of turning an unsubstantive edit into a substantive one by finding ways to actually improve the post more then more power to them. If they're upping their edited character count without actually improving the post then they're not helping. If someone has enough edits rejected in a week they get edit banned.
@Servy: What do you recommend if there is a typo in a post title, and the misspelled word is a potentially useful keyword for searches? One typical example where I was tempted to edit until I got a warning about minor edits was when somebody asked an OpenGL questions about rendering triangles, but wrote "traingals" in the title. It was clear from the context that the question was not about girls on trains (train-gals), but I still thought that it was distracting from the content, and that it could affect searches.
@RetoKoradi If you can make a case for why a particular edit will have a significant impact, then by all means. In such a case the edit may well not have been too minor (although on a related note, Google is actually smart enough to handle typos in many cases; it's not just doing straight textual contains searches). Whether a post is minor or not is not about how many characters it edits, it's about how much value is added from the edit. Capitalizing an uncapitalized word in some contexts is very minor; when it changes a code block from an error to working code, it's not. Context matters.
I'm wondering how many minor edits would be approved in the amount of time spent on this meta answer.
jwg
jwg
1-3 would be valid if it wasn't the case that the review queue is almost always empty, with people waiting and refreshing in order to perform edits. 4 would be valid if there were no way of detecting minor edits and not bumping.
@jwg If you start encouraging users to flood the system with hundreds of suggested edits just changing a single misspelled work, then the it would become a problem. As it is, people end up edit banned when they do that. Those types of edits can be submitted far faster than they can be reviewed. Throw in 2-3 people concurrently flooding the system and they can easily max it out, preventing anyone else from ever using it. As for not bumping, there isn't an easy way to determine if an edit is minor, and if there were, it introduces abuses with vandalism not being bumped.
jwg
jwg
08:10
I'd like to see the evidence you have that the review queue would be overloaded. It seems likely that there are many potential reviewers who don't even bother to check for reviews as there are always so few available.
@jwg I've seen dozens of people go on an editing spree that find one common misspelling of a word, go into search, look for all instances of it, and suggest edits to fix all of them. It also happens with tagging issues, common signature words, common introductory words, etc. Generally these users get edit banned half way through their spree for suggesting too minor edits. When that's not a valid reason to reject, they won't stop. I know people will do this because I've seen it happen, personally, many many times. It is not a theory. It is observed behavior, and not particularly rare.
jwg
jwg
I'd like to see the evidence you have that the review queue would be overloaded.
@jwg I've already provided it. Clearly seeing as you're someone who isn't even capable of using the review system, let alone experienced with it, this may seem weird to you. To virtually anyone who's done even a moderate amount of edit reviewing, this will be a very familiar sight to see. When reviewing edits you run into the situation I described every couple of days, and that's with most of them learning it's wrong after the first or second spree. When they learn that it's allowed, you'd see almost nothing but those types of edits.
jwg
jwg
Right, except that I am capable of using the review system on sister sites. And that if it's possible to ban people for editing like this it would still be possible to edit ban them for editing like this even if 'minor' edits are not always rejected out of hand. And that if you can identify that an edit is minor as a reason to reject it, you can also identify that it is minor as a reason not to bump it. And that if you think reviewers are colluding with editors to pass vandalism through so it's hidden from .. what??
@jwg Sites that are not SO simply don't have the traffic or attention of SO. You can't really compare them. If minor edits should be approved, not rejected, why in the world should someone be banned for submitting 200 minor edits? To say that they should be banned is to say that those edits are problematic. If anyone can "approve but not bump" an edit then they could easily do so for problematic content. The reason that this is a problem is that it's more likely to be found by future googlers who will see it, but not know that they should, or how, to fix it, unlike visibility to regulars.
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@Servy No, not the fact that everything gets approved (which is false, by the way — both problems exist). Bad reviews in both directions were already a problem when the queue was clogged. It's not clear to me that the extra manpower has caused a decrease in quality (it wouldn't surprise me, but I've yet to see evidence). There is a huge problem with review quality, but the (relatively few) minor edits have nothing to do with that problem.
@Gilles Yes, I did indulge in a bit of hyperbole. Everything doesn't get approved, but in my experiences, about 75-80% of content that should be rejected is accepted. That's a huge margin of error. Yes, some edits are erroneously rejected, but they make up a fraction of a percent. Any reviewer may not be a scarce resource, but a quality reviewer seems to be. I also question your assertion that there are very few minor edits. The number of editors submitting minor edits may not be overwhelming, but when those people are going around submitting hundreds of minor edits a day...
@Servy "Generally these users get edit banned half way through their spree for suggesting too minor edits." Submitting 1000 edits to fix common typos is a service that should be 1. encouraged, and 2. automated on any site that cares about the quality of its content (cf. Wikipedia). If SO bans people for doing the right thing, no wonder there are so many bad questions and so few willing and able to fix them.
@ClementCherlin The plethora of bad questions on the site aren't a problem because of all of the questions with a single common typo in them. The problem with bad questions is that they're bad because they're missing information necessary to fix them, or they're way too broad, or nobody can understand what the question is asking at all (which isn't going to be the result of a single common typo).
Going around submitting 1000 edits to change some common typo causes more problems than the value of the edit, between the reviewer time wasted, the blocking of the edit queue to others, bumping posts, etc. So no, those people aren't doing the right thing. They're causing harm.
@Servy They are not causing harm. Blockage of the front page and the review queue are symptoms, the misdesign of the system is the disease. The system was implemented in such a way that it cannot tolerate large numbers of constructive edits by low-rep users. This major design bug has been known for years, but the attitude still remains "then don't make mass constructive edits" and the site suffers as as a result of driving away editors. I believe bugs should be fixed, not defended. Fixing typos, misspellings and syntax errors is a good thing, not just when 2000+ rep users do it.
@ClementCherlin Yes, the edits are causing harm. They're symptoms of edits that don't add substantial value. Yes, they're symptoms of the fact that allowing untrusted users to make edits has a cost, and the edit has to provide more value than that cost to be worth making. If it doesn't, it's not a constructive edit. As far as the design of the system, the system is designed such that it can only tolerate a certain number of edits, period, so it's important that those that go through actually be useful, rather than being wasted on useless edits.
@ClementCherlin If you have any ideas of ways to improve the ability of the system to handle suggested edits such that the costs of reviewing them, or their effects on the site, could be lowered, with an undue decrease in the quality of said reviews, by all means, suggest it. Just demanding that other people solve the problem so that the harmful edits that people are making be rendered blameless for their actions isn't really productive.
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"the system is designed such that it can only tolerate a certain number of edits, period" Then the system is broken. You cannot fix it by punishing contributors. You will instead teach people that it is not in their interest to contribute. That appears to be your desired outcome. Fixing typos, syntax errors, and spelling errors is constructive, not harmful. Banning people for constructive edits is harmful, not constructive. You are actively driving away constructive participants from this community.
"If you have any ideas of ways to improve the ability of the system to handle suggested edits such that the costs of reviewing them, or their effects on the site, could be lowered, with an undue decrease in the quality of said reviews, by all means, suggest it." Wikipedia has bots. Lots of them. They fix typos, they add and remove tags, they revert vandalism. SO doesn't. Why not? Well, because the review/bumping system is poorly designed and can't handle bots. Your choice whether you want to blame the community for the site's flaws.
@ClementCherlin Like I said, if you have suggestions for ways to improve the edit review system such that it can more effectively handle suggested edits, propose your changes. By punishing people for providing edits that are harmful we do indeed teach people that it is not in their interest to contribute harmful edits that don't actually provide meaningful improvements. That is indeed the goal. Hopefully they can then go on to make useful edits that actually add value, rather than continuing to engage in harmful behavior because people like you reward them for making the site worse.
@ClementCherlin Note that post a comment on this answer is not the appropriate way to propose changes to SO's review queue. If you want to propose that SO write bots to make edits, or to somehow adjust the editing system to allow bots to use it, then post a feature request with that proposal, that way people will actually be able to see it and evaluate it. Note that you'll probably want to flesh the idea out a bit when doing so, if you want it to be well received.
@Servy. You and many other high-rep users have made it crystal clear that you do not value me, my contributions, "people like me", or the contributions of "people like me". It does not encourage me to spend my time writing technical proposals that are almost sure to be rejected. The technical issue cannot be fixed until the cultural problem is fixed. (Edit: I just received a badge for making a very minor edit to, and bumping, a post that was inactive for more than 6 months. Make up your minds already!)
@ClementCherlin The only contributions you've made to the site are two suggested edits, neither of which have been indicated as being too minor, so I don't see what your basis for that is. No one has accused you of posting minor edits, or providing other contributions that aren't valuable. You're simply advocating for other users' ability to engage in harmful behavior. It also doesn't really make sense to say, "we shouldn't reduce the cost it takes to review edits until people recognize that it's appropriate to waste considerable resources reviewing edits that aren't useful".
@ClementCherlin The edit that you made that was approved wasn't a minor edit, and the edit that you made that was rejected wasn't rejected for being too minor (it was rejected for entirely different reasons). It sounds like you need to spend some time looking at other suggested edits to see some edits that are actually Too minor, and that really don't add value. You appear to be acting under the impression that others consider most any edit is too minor, which simply isn't the case.
@Servy: The topic of the question is why is fixing typos considered harmful on SO? I haven't suggested edits just to fix typos because I've tried and the site wouldn't let me. As the questioner wrote, "The TLDR seems to be that "we" prefer incorrect grammar and wrong spelling, to correct grammar, and good spelling. But that doesn't make sense, and it sounds a bit cynical". It appears that despite not making sense, it is indeed SO policy to keep incorrect grammar, wrong spelling, and syntax errors. My comments about not being wanted refer to your hostility towards mass edits.
@Servy: My complaint is that rather than saying "SO is at present not designed to allow mass constructive edits, so making mass edits is, at present not recommended", your stance appears to be that not only are mass edits harmful, but the people who make them are harmful to the site and deserve to be punished. I continue to maintain that it is neither the editor making the minor edit, nor the minor edit that is harmful, it is the poor quality of SO's editing and review toolset that causes inconvenience when large numbers of constructive minor edits are submitted at once.
@ClementCherlin No, the topic of the question is why minor edits are rejected. It doesn't specifically refer to typos over any other kind of too minor edit. My position is simply that any edit that causes more harm than good should be rejected, and not encouraged, and that edits whose improvements add less value than the cost of making the edit qualify as such an edit. Those edits are therefore harmful until such a time as the cost of making edits is lowered. Again, if you know of a way to allow those edits to be made at a lower cost, by all means, suggest it.
@ClementCherlin But as it is your argument is that we should encourage people to make the site worse and cause harm simply because there is a cost to managing suggested edits (and edits in general) that you are unwilling to consider.
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@Servy It is my argument we should encourage people to make the site better, and the cost of doing that is a cost inherent to Stack Overflow. I am willing to consider the cost of that evolution and growth. I also willing to consider the cost of letting the site rot. I believe that the existing bad code that prevents users from making large numbers of constructive edits, the bad attitude that dismisses criticism of that bad code, and the bad answers that result are costing the site and its users. Are you willing to consider those costs?
@ClementCherlin If you want to make the site better, then why encourage people to engage in actions that cause harm to the site, instead of encouraging them to engage in actions that actually make the site better? Telling people to go around and make harmful edits, just because it makes you feel good to make the site worse, isn't going to magically change the edit review process; if you want the edit review process changed, then come up with a better edit review process and propose it. Pretending problems don't exist isn't the way to solve problems.
@Servy Because fixing typos, syntax errors, misspellings, and so forth makes the site better. Blocking such edits makes the site worse. "Telling people to go around and make harmful edits, just because it makes you feel good to make the site worse" It does not make me feel good to make the site worse. It makes me feel bad that fixing syntax errors, typos, and misspellings is considered harmful. It makes me feel bad that I can't fix problems I see, and that I am chastised for attempting to do so. It makes me feel bad that there is such hostility towards constructive editors.
@ClementCherlin If the edits are actual real problems, and the edits are making notable improvements to the post, to the point that they're worth the time to review, then they're not minor edits, and there is no problem. When the edits aren't actually making meaningful improvements, then no, blocking them doesn't make the site worse, suggesting them makes the site worse. You can fix problems. You're not being prevented from fixing problems. You're being prevented from wasting people's time not actually fixing real problems.
There's hostility towards people who don't care about making the site worse just because it makes them feel good, and they want to ignore the harm that they're causing just because it's not convenient to consider it. There isn't hostility towards editors that are actually making the site better and putting forth constructive edits that actually add value.
@Servy: Yes, there is. You're the one showing it, right now. Every post you've made in this thread is hostile towards minor edits and the people who make them.
@ClementCherlin Yes, like I said, there's hostility towards people that go around intentionally making the site worse and causing harm by posting minor edits because they don't actually care about all of the problems they're causing. There's no hostility at all for the people actually making useful edits that make the site better and don't actually cause harm. I'm not sure why that would be surprising, but apparently it is. Why you'd expect people intentionally causing harm would be welcomed and encouraged is...beyond me.
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@Servy: Antagonizing people who are trying to help by accusing them of "intentionally causing harm" unintentionally causes harm by driving away contributors. Please be aware that you have already caused harm to the site, and if you continue with this needlessly hostile attitude, you will be, if not intentionally, at least recklessly causing further harm to the site. Ignore the emotional effects of criticism at your own, and the site's, peril. SO has an apparently well-deserved reputation of being hostile to potential contributors. That's bad for the future of SO.
@ClementCherlin So we should never ever tell anyone when they do something wrong, ever, because the harm caused by informing someone that they're intentionally hurting people is worse than any harm caused by someone intentionally hurting people. Understood. So you're saying we should never enforce any rule ever, never enforce any law ever, never punish anyone for anything they ever do, ever. Sorry, but no.
If you're going to intentionally cause harm to others, then the consequences of that are your own doing. While it's unfortunate that your feeling end up needing to be hurt when you're informed that intentionally harming people is wrong and you shouldn't do it, the harm caused to you by being informed that your behavior is harmful is necessary, and the lesser harm of the options available.
@Servy: In my opinion, everything you just said to me applies to you. You're harming the site, the users of the site, the content on the site, etc. etc. etc. by preventing people from making constructive edits, by punishing people who make constructive edits, and by calling constructive edits "harmful". To what end? To ensure that bad answers are left bad until a high-rep user comes along? If only high-rep users are trusted to make edits, and low-rep users should be punished for making edits, why not shut off registration and ban everyone with <2000 rep from using the site at all?
@ClementCherlin Calling harmful edits "constructive", when you know they cause more harm than good, is simply lying. You know that they cause harm, you know that the harm is more than the good that they do, and you don't care. Saying that it's wrong for people to inform you of maliciously harming the site just because it makes you feel bad to be told that knowingly causing harm is harmful is ludicrous. Lots of <2k users actually make constructive edits. Those are great. Some don't, and they make edits that don't actually help the site. Those aren't, and we don't want people making them.
@Servy: No, I don't know that they cause harm, and you telling me that I do doesn't make it so. I am not lying to you, I disagree with you. When you tell people who disagree with you that they are lying, something you have no way of knowing, you're being dishonest yourself. I dislike the hostile attitude that high-rep users like yourself have towards other members of the SO community. Do you want to drive people away from becoming contributors? That's what you're doing. You come across not as trying to educate potential contributors, but trying to convince them it's not worth the effort.
@ClementCherlin You've been told that making minor edits is harmful, and your response is that you don't care, and that it's the site's fault that minor edits are harmful and that you're not going to stop making minor edits just because it harms the site. So yes, you do know that they cause harm. You've said you don't care, not that you disagree. I'm trying to drive people away from making harmful edits, I rather doubt that the only possible contribution you can make to the site is to suggest harmful edits; I have complete faith in your ability to suggest quality edits, at a minimum.

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