I don't see this as being important enough to warrant a task or the massive resources it would take to build this list. As stated in the comments, there are around 4,000,000 posts which would qualify for this list. Only a small percentage of those would be relevant to a specific user and an even smaller percentage voteable by that same user. That's a very small margin of usefulness.
How many people would even see it?
Thinking about how the review system works, it takes two people to mark something as "reviewed." So really, only two people would ever look at it, right? Using the review beta system, you'd have four options:
- Upvote - This post is useful
- Downvote - This post is not useful
- Do Not Vote - This post is not particularly useful or not useful.
- Not Sure - I'm not really qualified to vote on this.
Sure, as long as people keep clicking Not Sure, people will continue to see it, but it only takes two actions to clear it out of the list. What happens if those two people Do Not Vote on it either? Do you just leave it in the list until two people do vote on it? That would imply that all posts should have at least two votes on them, which doesn't make much sense.
Just because a post has a score of zero doesn't mean it's a bad post. I personally only vote up a post when I feel it deserves another upvote. It may be subjective, but it works for me. I've even been known to downvote a post merely because "this post has too many upvotes and I don't feel it deserves that many."
You also can't forget about all the anonymous visitors that might run across your question and still find it helpful. They can provide anonymous feedback as well. Ultimately, you're not posting content just to get upvotes, you're posting it to help people. As long as you don't start receiving downvotes on it, then it's probably helping someone.
How does this accomplish the goal of reviewing?
All of the existing review tasks are meant to help clean up the site, not find things to vote on. Every task in there is meant to find and get rid of the crap and keep the good stuff. How would this achieve that goal at all? A post not having any votes just doesn't mean anything.
Is the review system even a good fit?
There are tons of answers out there which were posted after another answer but say the exact same thing. These answers most often don't get voted upon because they're not incorrect, but there is another, better answer that already covers the information. Yet seeing the answer show up in the review panel, you wouldn't have any clue about that, because it would only show that answer. Why would I want to upvote some random answer when there is a better answer on that question which I would rather upvote?
The review system just doesn't fit well with this kind of voting motivation. It would only make sense to show answers together with all the other answers on the question. Then you also need to see the question to tell if the answers even answer the question. So basically, you need to see the entire question and all its answers to make an adequate decision on whether to upvote an answer (not so much for the question itself). This would be helpful for upvoting one or two answers to the top of a long list of answers that have no score yet, but isn't that kind of what the Unanswered questions tab is for?
How does this increase visibility?
It doesn't. The posts wouldn't be any more visible than they would be as if they were listed on the home page or on some other list throughout the site. What really gets people to come view a question is a) interesting tags, b) an interesting excerpt, and most importantly c) an outstanding and descriptive title. Without those, of course the question won't get many views, and naturally not many votes on it or its answers. If you want more visibility, there are things you, as a user, can do to help that:
- Edit the question to improve its content and title and make sure it's tagged appropriately.
- Offer a bounty on the question to attract more attention.
- Share the link to the question or answer with your friends, on your blog, or wherever else you might converse with people on a regular basis.