@rene You've reviewed 40 posts today (of which 1 was an audit), thanks! The time between your first and last review today was 30 minutes and 46 seconds, averaging to a review every 46 seconds.
I'm not familiar with this. I think I am supposed to do close reviews, but if I click on one of the 10 tags, it brings me to the question list and not to the SO close vote review.
> Thank you for reviewing 40 close votes today; come back in 2 hours to continue reviewing. I'll certainly not come back in 2 hours, since I'm asleep then.
Favorite question to answer, since I have a quite narrow field here on SO. I'm certainly impatient. However, it's weekend and perhaps I'm not online until Monday.
Should I post my coding opinion on other peoples answers? I'm fine doing it on mine, but if someone else posts an answer and it is accepted, should I suggest something to the OP that I think will help them, but the owner of that answer might not
@JacobGray I've been bashed several times for leaving a comment not intended at the OP but at future readers.... But I do not understand why. I'm of the opinion that it is positive to leave constructive comments on answers, directed at future readers, not only the OP.
sigh. The suggested edit system is really broken, isn't it? I keep getting CVQ reviews that are "too old to migrate", but only entered the CVQ because some minor robo-edit bumped it and then someone else decided it was low quality, creating two queues worth of review busywork on a 2011 post just so some shady user could get +2 rep.
Well, the SEQ could only function more efficiently if it wasn't there at all. We could remove the queue and drop the auto-edit rep to 1, and I'm not sure we'd see much of a change on the site. Maybe fewer worthless minor reviews because sub-2k users wouldn't get rep for botting spelling edits.
I'm not even sure it would be worse. Edits for sub-2k users go through basically automatically anyway due to robo-reviewers, and removing the queue would remove the +2 rep, which would remove the incentive to create crap edits just for the rep.
mind you, we could still have 2k minimum for editing, but no rep for suggesting edits
@RyanBemrose no they don't go through. Some of them do, and the worst ones that do gather huge interest. Take into consideration the huge cognitive bias. It's an affront to all the proper reviewers to assume that everybody is robo. Hell no
The queue is not there for the +2 rep, it's there to prevent abuse. As I said, the two could be independent
As I said, there are (at least) two causes here. You're talking about suggested edits, and you're talking about getting rep for suggesting edits. Those are only linked at the moment.
we could have a system where users can only suggest after 2k rep (for protection against abuse and stupidity)
@RyanBemrose I disagree. It's the incentive of some bad edits, which would not be there. Badges for editing are another cause. And simple ignorance is another one.
Remove the rep gain, and you remove one part of the problem.
but the suggested edits queue is very necessary to prevent the walls of SO being painted with fecal matter
If the true reason for the rep is to incentivize good edits, why is it that we take away that incentive at 2000 rep? The people more likely to provide good edits because they've had more experience on SO are the ones we don't incentivize.
I agree the SEQ is necessary. That was more blowing off steam than a genuine suggestion. I'm serious about the rep issue though. It's a massive loophole that people are using to get 500+ rep with low effort, riding past all of the early privilege roadblocks.
And the robo-reviewer problem in the SEQ is the main thing allowing that to go on. If the SEQ were functioning as any kind of impediment to bad edits, the problem of botting spelling edits wouldn't be there.
> When a suggested edit is approved, the user who suggested it gets +2 reputation. The regular daily reputation cap applies, and the total cap for reputation gained via suggested edits is 1,000. Like any other reputation, the +2 is reversed if the edited post is ever deleted.
Anyways, two separate problems: 1) You can get to 1k rep without asking or answering a single question by flooding the SEQ with edits, and 2) Bad edits are approved at nearly the same rate as good ones. The combination of the problems means that the lowest effort way to get to 1k rep is to flood single-word edits, and if you're dedicated or have a bot you can do it in a day.