Yesterday I received the Revival badge for this answer. It has been steadily getting upvotes since I posted it four years ago - why should I receive Revival for it at this point in time? The only reason that comes to mind would be if the rules for Revival have recently changed, but I didn't find anything to support that idea ...
1 Answer
It looks like the first eligible answer which happened to score 2 was downvoted 2 days ago, dropping it to 1.
This made your answer the oldest answer with a score of 2 or more.
Technically, you were the second answer to score 2 or more, but the badge script apparently doesn't take into account that there was a prior answer which had already earned Revival, and also awarded the badge to you once your answer met the requirements.
-
1Thanks, that explains it. I guess, another option could have been deletion of a previous answer.– takrlApr 6, 2016 at 8:19
-
-
12Oh, I have always interpreted the rule as "You are first to answer, and your score is 2 or more". Apparently it is "Your answer has score 2 or more, and your answer is the first among all such answers"– justhalfApr 7, 2016 at 9:00
-
Would be quite difficult to track that as well, without adding a new column to the database table for the question.– AStopherApr 7, 2016 at 9:22
-
@justhalf The question isn't revived until one of the late answers has scored 2 or more. A question apparently can be revived more than once, if no late answers presently revive it, so it's not even necessarily the first late answer which has done so.– user4151918Apr 7, 2016 at 10:44
-
Does this mean the user who posted the first eligible answer lost their Revival badge?– JALApr 7, 2016 at 16:40
-
7No. Badges aren't revoked unless there was fraud involved in obtaining them. As you can see, they still have it, even though their score no longer meets the requirement.– user4151918Apr 7, 2016 at 17:02
-