I would like to start a discussion on introducing a "meta-review" queue. The basic idea would be that after a finished review in any queue, there is an option to challenge the result.
This could be similar to the concept of flagging: in the newly-created queue, high-reputation users would be presented the review and vote Looks ok or I don’t agree or similar.
In addition to being able to (somewhat) democratically detect reviews that went wrong, this queue could generate interesting data/results, e.g.:
- better positive reviews suitable for audits; and
- a record on potentially wrong decisions that could help to identify poor reviewers.
The rationale behind this idea
There are a lot of issues here at Stack Overflow that need reviewing. To make reviewing feasible, a majority vote of a small number of people decides.
While this makes perfect sense, due to the low number of voters, this procedure can lead to decisions that do not reflect the opinion of the whole community.
One possible approach to tackle that is to increase the number of people judging controversial reviews. I would argue that the idea of a meta-review queue would solve that with a moderate amount of additional reviewing needed.
wouldn't it be better to increase the number of reviewers needed per review
- absolutely. But this comes with the risk that the queues might grow too fast. The overall idea is to minimize the number of reviews where the majority vote diverges from the opinion of the community, without stuffing the queues.3-5
randomly selected members is not necessarily the same as the majority vote of all members. If it were, we would not need expensive stuff like elections, but elect the next president by asking you, me and some of our friends. The idea is the same as in my linked discussion: Reviews can go wrong, and I feel that it could make sense to tackle that better.challenge
in the review link, once the review is completed. One could also think about declaring reviews that aggregated a lot of different opinions as controversial.min(3, 2x+1)
for tox
against) of votes one way to another, so reviews that are close will stay in the queue until there's a definitive answer.It seems likely that the original author and anyone who voted against the "winning" result would almost always challenge the review, creating a huge amount of extra work.
- I am not so sure about that. If designed similar to flagging, users could accumulatedeclined
flags for pushing clearly correct reviews in this particular queue.