12:54 PM
Imo, there's a difference between fixing everything and fixing everything
3/5 fixes ain't bad, but if the question is trash and the edit doesn't recover it, it's a waste of all our time
but like Ryan said, there's degrees to this as well; you can capitalize all i
s, but neglect code formatting, and that's a problem, especially if formatting is outright broken
But the other way around isn't as bad in comparison
Speaking for myself, I tend not to suspend reviewers over it unless I also detect other bad patterns while investigating -- something there often is
bad edits on bad questions that attract approvals tend to be an indicator of a bad reviewer. Not always, but often, and that's something that's revealed when investigating other reviews
Nick's approach (that I've mostly stolen because it's brilliant) is helping robo-reviewers target known-good edits by rejecting all the trash ones before they have a chance to review them
It's an imperfect solution to a garbage review system with a lot of garbage reviewers and garbage editors
Where the garbage company that makes this garbage neglects it and adds another garbage queue that's just first questions with extra steps
Now, because you brought up my area of expertise, allow me (well, no, you don't have a choice) to properly destroy your entire argument:
@DanielWiddis it often is, because a lot of those edits are on low-quality posts that get closed and eventually deleted, never to be seen by the public again. That's a waste of the editor's time, and the reviewer's time. As mentioned in the above block by me and Ryan, there's also degrees to this
Speaking for myself, I find it extremely hard to make an after-the-fact judgement call on incomplete edits, because there's a point on both sides; yes, edits should be complete, but in some cases, there's minimal to edit and going after the reviewers is typically not worth it, and going after the editors is correct, but impractical to do because there's a ton of them and one of me
but rejecting edits on garbage posts where the edits don't do something extremely important? That's constructive, and here's why:
1. as Nick said, it nudges editors away from editing trash, which means fewer edits there, leading to the second point;
2. Any reduction to edits on unrecoverable posts opens up the queue to more edits on actually good posts
That's where the bulk of the problem, and mod flags, stem from
People spend so much time editing trash that often gets closed and deleted, that it fills up the entire suggested edits queue and prevents edits to good content that's going to be on the site for a long time
The point being, editing garbage wastes reviewer time, as well as editor time, on something that could've been spent editing higher quality posts that has meta problems (grammar, formatting, noise, etc), but where the content is otherwise good
@DanielWiddis yes, because editors fill it up with trash, and reviewers encourage it by approving bad edits on bad questions
@DanielWiddis Not Nick's fault, and projecting all the problems with suggested edits on one reviewer isn't particularly nice, to be honest. We have a perpetual reviewer shortage; wasting approvals on bad edits on bad questions doesn't help with that. You seem to be forgetting that we have a standard to maintain as well; reviews necessarily have to be good as well, and robo reviewers don't make this easy
@DanielWiddis No, shit is being edited, and that's the problem. The queue is full because we don't have enough reviewers, a lot of those reviewers approve trash, and approving trash edits signals those edits are fine, which fills the queue with more shit
It's a circle, really, and I can't be arsed to graph it:
bad edit suggested
bad edit approved
more bad edits suggested
not enough room for good edits on good posts
If you don't see the problem with wasting reviews on bad edits that essentially is an actually slippery slope down the lane of "more trash suggested" meaning less good edits on good posts, I can't make you either; but it's an actual problem regardless of whether you agree or not
@DanielWiddis That's unnecessarily harsh
@DanielWiddis Yes, it's progress, but when it's reviewed, it has to be more significant than what a 2k user might do. That's incidentally why there's a 6 char limit, in case you forgot -- when it's reviewed, it's expected to be good enough to warrant taking volunteer time to review, now, onto the next point...
@DanielWiddis while we do want exhaustive edits, it can't be denied that it's not always possible. We all miss stuff, and in the case of new users, it's a whole educational process. I'm once again going to compare to wikipedia; user talk pages are incredibly useful, and I'm somewhat upset we don't have it here
Essentially, if I notice you do an incomplete edit, I can message you (in public, as well) to comment on the edit, and suggest further improvements, or point out things that shouldn't have been edited, including pointing out how both british and american english are fine and shouldn't be edited to be the other
We don't get that luxury in the case of incomplete edits, though, which once again leads us back to the spectrum; how bad is it that some parts were missed?
That's what it really boils down to. In some cases, such as missing some uncapitalized i
s when fixing severely broken formatting, the value is abundantly clear. If it's the other way around, its lack of value, especially when reviewers have to spend time on it, and the post can't be edited while it's pending, makes it a clear rejection candidate
You need to start interpreting "no improvement" as what it really is; a relative term. It doesn't mean absolutely nothing was improved, but that in the grand scheme of things, it's a pointless edit and a waste of time
@DanielWiddis yeah, and both editing and reviewing, as well as other moderation has a ton of complexity to it. That's not our problem to solve, though; if you want change, you have to ask SE
Or post on twitter, really; they seem way more responsive when they're trending negatively on social media than when they're being bashed on meta
@DanielWiddis the thing about this is that it still takes reviewers. We want as complete edits as possible to conserve resources
One exhaustive edit, followed by potentially one correctional edit, is a hell of a lot less resource-intensive than four edits doing trivial stuff; not to forget that it's a lot less time-consuming, given that we don't exactly have a queue small enough to constantly have someone ready to review whatever comes in
@DanielWiddis For 3/5 improvements? No. For consistently approving severely lacking edits or edits on unrecoverable posts? That's more likely, but still not a guarantee, because I'm nice and it's hard to justify edge-cases without a comprehensive history, and I'd rather not annoy CMs more than I already have (and plan to if a certain tag bug isn't fixed)
@DanielWiddis Nick prioritizes reviews; and that's fine. Someone has to
If you don't see the value in that, then you don't have to prioritize reviews
No one is forcing you anyway (hopefully). If you don't want to do reviews, don't. It's that simple. But projecting everything wrong with suggested edits on Nick, one of the few people on the site who actually gives a shit about reviews really grinds my gears. If you don't like reviews, then don't do them. If you have a problem with the system, post feature requests on meta (if they're good, I'll happily status-review them). If you don't like the policies around reviews, don't do reviews.