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While in the suggested edit review queue, I noticed the same edit by the same user come up on two different questions. It was a single-letter change to correct a typo in the name of a common programming language.

On a hunch, I checked the user's activity and found nearly 60 suggestions in the past ~30 minutes. After spot-checking at least a dozen, I determined that every one of these suggestions corrected the same typo (and nothing else).

Normally I would approve an edit that corrects a typo; words should be spelled correctly, especially important words like the name of a language, especially in important places like the title of the post. However, this is a clear case of a user querying for some common error and then correcting it in bulk without regard for the overall quality of the post.

This has been discussed in the past; one SO moderator suggested approving the edits in this 2011 answer, another SO moderator suggested rejecting the edits in this 2012 answer and so on (see "related reading," below). I'm cautious about taking these older opinions at face value, considering the changes surrounding the removal of the "too minor" rejection reason in 2014.

I'm not asking whether to accept or reject the edits themselves. I voted to reject many of those pending edits using the custom "causes harm" reason and the explanation:

Please do not use search to suggest the same small edit in bulk to many questions without thoroughly revising each question as it deserves.

What I want to know is:

  1. Should I alert a moderator about this activity? If so, what's the best way—a custom flag on one of the edited questions?
  2. Is it appropriate to solicit assistance from other users in chat to reject the remaining pending suggestions?

Related reading

And on Meta Stack Exchange:

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    Totally flag it for moderator attention.
    – Pekka
    Apr 1, 2015 at 18:25
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    meta.stackexchange.com/questions/226793/… taught me that these kinds of edits aren't necessarily unwelcome, but one should wait until 2k+ rep to do them.
    – jdphenix
    Apr 1, 2015 at 18:48
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    That's annoying. He's not even capitalizing the name of the language correctly... Apr 1, 2015 at 19:02
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    Has anyone left a comment to this user suggesting they stop these types of edits? Or point them to this post or one of the other Meta posts about serial editing?
    – Taryn
    Apr 1, 2015 at 19:08
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    Related on Meta.SE: An alert to serial minor edits, Flag a user as "serial minor editor", What to do about users who search for spelling mistakes? There's nothing a mod can really do at the moment, aside from sitting in the queue, waiting for more suggestions and rejecting them.
    – jscs
    Apr 1, 2015 at 19:11
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    Thanks for pointing me to this post. I was unaware that there would be an issue with simple typo edits. I accidentally searched for "javscript" and when dozens of posts came up with the same typo, I decided to go through and correct as many as I could, thinking it would help others find the posts better. Apr 1, 2015 at 19:12
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    @BenjaminRay For the record, I asked this to better document site policy, not as any sort of public shaming or witch hunt. That said, LittleBobbyTables' edits following some of your suggestions are great examples to follow in trying to make the best revision possible.
    – Air
    Apr 1, 2015 at 19:20
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    For you as someone whose edits don't have to be reviewed, @picciano, it's less of an issue, but you're still bumping questions to the front page, and flooding can be annoying, especially if you've only fixed one little thing on an otherwise poor question.
    – jscs
    Apr 1, 2015 at 19:41
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    If the moderation of minor edits is the real issue, then allow minor edits without moderation. It seems unwise to discourage users from improving the content, even in minor ways.
    – picciano
    Apr 1, 2015 at 19:44
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    It sounds like the bigger issue is the fact that such small typo edits bump the question to the front page and flood the moderation queue. Had I made these same edits over the course of a month, it would probably not have become an issue. Apr 1, 2015 at 19:46
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    As for a minor edit bumping to the front page, it seems same logic should apply. Don't have minor edits bump to the front page. I get the concerns, but it should be fixed correctly, rather than preventing an otherwise useful action.
    – picciano
    Apr 1, 2015 at 19:48
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    @BenjaminRay, editing in a single character would still be an issue, because you are not correcting the rest of the things which need editing. When editing a post, you need to take the time to update everything in the post, not just one thing. For instance, fix the capitalization of JavaScript, update grammar, punctuation, etc.. Apr 1, 2015 at 19:56
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    @MikeMcCaughan I find that problematic. An improvement is an improvement. Not fixing everything isn't a flaw.
    – hobbs
    Apr 1, 2015 at 22:00
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    @MikeMcCaughan the person correcting the typo might not have the ability to address anything else, and the next person who comes around to improve technical aspects might not catch the typo. Putting aside review effort for the moment, the best way to improve posts is not to have a minimum standard of edit size, because then you only get an edit if sufficient knowledge and effort come from one person.
    – hobbs
    Apr 1, 2015 at 22:24
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    Why would you want to reject edits that are correcting mistakes? If someone kept spelling Microsoft as Microsoaft - why not do a bulk search and correct it? Seems like meaningless dither dathering to me. Apr 2, 2015 at 3:22

3 Answers 3

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I'll answer your specific questions:

Should I alert a moderator about this activity? If so, what's the best way—a custom flag on one of the edited questions

My feeling on this is it depends. I know, that's kind of a terrible answer from a moderator but here is why I say that.

Are the edits vandalizing posts?

If yes, then sure find one of their posts and use a custom flag with links to some edits asking us to research and step in, if needed.

If not and you think this warrants moderator intervention, then flag for a moderator.

Remember that moderators are human exception handlers, meaning we step in where the community cannot. In some of these edit sprees, it's entirely possible that the behavior could be stopped without us getting involved. As I said in my comment above:

Has anyone left a comment to this user suggesting they stop these types of edits? Or point them to this post or one of the other Meta posts about serial editing?

By contacting the user via a comment, you've got the ability to get their attention much faster than flagging for a moderator. We've got 1.5k+ flags in the queue and unfortunately, that means that your flag will be buried in the backlog until one of us gets it and can process it. In cases like this, it might be quicker to connect with that user and explain to them why we don't like the edit sprees. If you leave a comment and the behavior continues, then you've still got other options. You could invite the user to chat to discuss what they are doing, etc.

There have been numerous cases that I've seen edit sprees come to an end because the user has been notified by another community member to stop. The edit spree that triggered this question was stopped by pointing the user to this discussion and no moderator was involved.

Can you see why it depends comes into play? There are several things that you as a user could do before involving a moderator. Remember, we should only be involved when the community can't handle it themselves. In this case, there are things that you can do to try and fix what is happening.

Is it appropriate to solicit assistance from other users in chat to reject the remaining pending suggestions?

If you feel that all of these edits are, in fact, harmful and need to be rejected, then sure reach out to other users and ask for their help in reviewing the edits.

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    Isn't this asking people to act vigilante when they spot "odd behaviour" by their own definition? Contacting users behaving oddly and asking them what they are up to could lead to confrontation or escalation of simple issues. These issues may be better assessed and/or stopped by an experienced person who has earned the site's trust. When the issue is bulk behaviour of an individual user (as opposed to individual edits, questions, comments, answers), I think that moderation queue should almost always be better. Apr 2, 2015 at 7:16
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    @NeilSlater Nope, I'm not at all asking users to be vigilantes with this. I've attempted to clarify my answer. My point is that feel free to flag for a moderator in these cases, but you have tools at your disposal to help curb these types of edit sprees without getting a moderator involved.
    – Taryn
    Apr 2, 2015 at 12:48
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    @NeilSlater - To put what bluefeet's saying in a different way: if you have a problem with how your neighbor's dog is pooping in your yard, you might want to politely talk to them about it instead of immediately going to the police. I've seen many of these edit sprees stopped early by a simple, polite comment from someone who disagreed with the edits, without moderators getting involved.
    – Brad Larson Mod
    Apr 2, 2015 at 14:36
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Non-moderator users do not have the toolkit to deal with aggregate behaviour of specific users on the site. We have the ability to deal with individual comments, questions, answers, edits.

If you are concerned about a person's general behaviour on the site, and there is not clear guidance for it, ask on meta as you did here.

If based on the answer in meta, the behaviour is considered damaging or unwanted on the site, then do not contact the user, simply flag it - use an appropriate standard reason whenever possible (for efficiency), or use other describing the issue. It may be a good idea in your description to link the meta post that helped you decide to raise the flag - but not just a link, something like "This too minor edit repeated on many posts, I think the user may need mod attention: <link>"

The moderators have the toolkit and trust of the site to deal with it appropriately. You risk stress of confrontation and petty reprisals from users who are willing to stretch the site rules. Besides which, you could be wrong. The chances of calling someone out for anti-social behaviour resolving well in a single person's favour are not high, and not worth the risk.

Collecting some other well-meaning users together to help edit/down-vote or otherwise critique the unwanted behaviour is essentially forming a vigilante group. This could be very unfair to the person being targeted if it turns out the site consensus is not against their behaviour.

I guess the above is a meta-meta answer, but I am posting it as an alternative to the "reach out" answer, which I feel could lead to more problems on the site than it will solve.

In this specific case, I would recommend leaving the robo-editor alone, as the overall effect is the improvement in questions. This editor will get some easy badges - that is a separate issue, because we don't ever measure the quality of edits other than a binary accept/reject, so neither does the rep system. Requiring that all edits must improve by some undefined non-trivial amount is not the fix to that in my opinion.

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    +1 for mentioning that users should not go vigilante. I always find it odd how some users have self-assigned themselves with the authority to engage with (so-called) robo-reviewers and fix the behaviour of other users without any community concensus. I like this alternate solution to not indulge in conflicts without the proper tools. Apr 2, 2015 at 8:10
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    "simply flag it" -- I think it would be helpful to mention here that falg message would better refer to respective meta post, so that moderator can get to more context and details of the issue (I for one try to always refer to relevant meta posts in flag messages)
    – gnat
    Apr 2, 2015 at 8:25
  • Thanks for your input. For what it's worth, I couldn't care less about the user's badges. What I do think is worth considering is the process by which users learn to contribute better and better edits over a period of time, during which they have the benefit of peer review. I think of the +2 rep less as currency or reward than as an indicator of progress toward that point in time when the training wheels come off. Treating this experience like nothing but mechanical data entry circumvents that process, denies the editor of valuable experience and increases the load on the review queue.
    – Air
    Apr 2, 2015 at 15:10
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Seems like we have a process problem, without any sort of malice from Benjamin, the author of the edits.

The fact that minor edits bump the questions should be addressed. Barring that, I think Benjamin's edits do improve the overall quality of the site by teaching proper capitalization of one of the the most common programming languages in use today.

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