4:59 AM
@HenryEcker Ah, wow. I... don't think I knew that was a thing.
@gparyani Hm, I'd have to think more about it. On first blush, I quite like that suggestion. I am somewhat sympathetic to the concerns about overrunning Meta, but I think we have no valid basis to speculate about how frequently this would occur without actually trying it. Currently, we have no way for users to indicate that an edit is invalid other than coming to Meta, and while it does happen, we're not exactly overrun.
So, giving users a pre-filled template might increase the rate at which they come to Meta to complain, but on the other hand, it would be expected to increase the quality of those complaints, which would be a net positive, in my mind.
I do agree with @RyanM (unsurprisingly) that most of these could be adjudicated by a moderator and dispatched with a single "valid"/"invalid" click (where "invalid" would remove it from the audit pool, whereas "valid" would notify the user who complained that their complaint was invalid and the audit was sustained by a moderator).
I guess that would probably scale better, although the concerns about scale still exist... Overloading moderators is at least as much of a concern, if not more so, than overloading Meta.
And for things like this, while I do fully trust the mod team to make the right decision, especially since audits are supposed to be obvious, not edge cases, I tend to think in general that the more work that can be done by the community, the better, which would be an argument in favor of having Meta adjudicate these.
If nothing else, Meta could reach a consensus, and a moderator could click a button.
That's a lot of words to write just out of a concern that I might accidentally agree with you. :-p
I absolutely, one-hundred-percent agree that there needs to be a way for users to appeal a review suspension, and that it should be done by claiming that specific review tasks were invalid (not just a general "I want my review suspension reviewed/repealed").
I'm not that concerned about the details of how that process would work, whether it would involve mods, or Meta, or CMs, or what. That's an implementation detail that pales in comparison to the primary issue of having such an escalation system for an obviously imperfect system.
Anyway, upvoted your suggestion. I didn't see it, because it was on MSE, which I don't routinely read.
@RyanM That's fixable, with extra effort. You probably know that. You may already point it out yourself in the subsequent messages, which I haven't read yet.
@gparyani Yes, agreed. But how do we fix that? By not having a system automatically select them, but instead by having moderators manually select posts to be audits, both "known good" and "known bad" posts. It would be trivial for us to do this with answers while we're handling NAA flags. We see both types.
The pool doesn't even need to be that large. Multiple people could be shown the exact same audits. In fact, I'd argue that would be better, as it would bring consistency. So the pool only needs to be large enough that the same person doesn't get shown the same audit multiple times. Considering audits aren't all that frequent, and SO gets lots of posts, I don't really think that'd be a huge problem to deal with.
Plus, we could still have the automatic selection algorithm running, just with the ability for mods to review its choices and kick out the ones they didn't want, plus the ability to add in things we think would make good audits but the system doesn't select.
And, you don't have to have only recent posts as audits, so things that mods have historically added to the audit pool could be retained, perhaps with some automatic fuzzing of the date-time-stamp.
@gparyani Are you certain that's how it works? I don't think failing a single audit is ever sufficient to get a ban.
@RyanM Yes, the system will automatically suggest an increased suspension duration if the user has been previously suspended before for that same reason. That's on top of the fact that certain suspension template reasons start out recommending a suspension, whereas others start with just a warning.