This question got me thinking...three users were able to approve edits to a tag wiki that they don't have any sort of showing in.
(I'm sure that third user had a momentary blip, and that his C++ tag score is so innumerable that it can't appear in sorted order.)
The concern that I have with this is that it leads to very poor reviews of the tag blurb and content, and could lead to misleading or damaging information being spread through those.
What I'm proposing here is hopefully a simple system to prevent bad edits to tag wikis.
Any user that is reviewing any given tag must meet this criteria:
- If there is at least one gold badge user in it:
- One must have a bronze badge in the tag - this is enough to establish familiarity with the content material to know what's good, bad, and/or ugly.
- One must have a bronze badge in the tag - this is enough to establish familiarity with the content material to know what's good, bad, and/or ugly.
- Otherwise, the user must meet one of these two criteria:
- Be a trusted user (been around the system long enough that the system and community likely trust you to not mess things up too badly), or
- Be one of the top 20 users in the tag.
Suggesting edits to the tag wiki and excerpt will remain the same.
A cursory glance at the bronze badges page suggests that there's less than 3K users in any one tag; this reduces the surface area of potentially poor edits. This may also introduce the scenario in which there aren't enough people reviewing the less boisterous tags, but the total amount of trusted users in the system (ballpark about 1.8-2K) should cover that.
Of course, this is open to suggestion. Hopefully this curbs bad edits to tag wikis.