I have found similar questions asking Why does commenting cause me to fail a review audit? and Review audit failed after just clicking "add comment". Here is what I've asked:
I was reviewing a low-quality answer (now deleted): https://stackoverflow.com/review/low-quality-posts/6030936
I skimmed the answer and thought it was basically saying "I have a similar issue" (in about 2 lines), "I did something that may have solved the problem" (in one line), and something else polite (in one line). (Note: This is out of my memory and turns out the match the actual deleted answer which wasn't visible to me until revealed in one of the answers here by a high-rep user below).
The rejecting comment under that answer says "If you have a different question, then etc.". I think this is clearly a misunderstanding on the commentator's part that the person answering was asking another question rather than trying to answer. I clicked "EDIT", with an intention to help the guy by probably reorganizing the answer and moving the potential solution line upfront, and probably fix other things upon closer look. I have seen many cases where an good answer is dismissed as a comment or question just because it contains a question mark to confirm something, and helped to improve answers by removing that misunderstanding.
My question is about the timing of audit, I was banned immediately from reviewing the moment I clicked "EDIT" button, without knowing what I was going to edit.
I EDIT and cancel about half the time, depending on whether the question/answer can be salvaged eventually. Now as with the other complaints referenced at the top of the question, the automated system inferred my intention and concluded that I must eventually submit the EDIT after inspection. That's part I of my question. Is that reasonable?
Part II of my question is that I found no way to flag an automated audit result, other than posting it on a case-by-case basis here at the meta.
Part III of my question is that quite often, the post (question/answer) that fail you in audit is deleted (as is with my case) so that you don't have a chance to review your issues or errors without going through the trouble of raising a question at meta.
I don't think the above features are reasonable, regardless of whether in my specific case the link in the solution is actually a spam or a good link as in the other answers, and whether and what I was going to commit in the edit.
I hope this clarifies my question.