Here is a suggested edit I made which was rejected: https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/10779276
I'm asking because I find a high rejection rate for suggested edits (why do these not go to the author as well to override if they agree? They have more specific knowledge and context than random reviewers)
Here is more background on the edit:
In the answer the author references an external bug tracking system issue which original had a state of "Open" for the issue KT-7033. Issue KT-7033 is now "Fixed". This is VERY important information, and in the answer the author states basically that "X is true, until Y is fixed". He says this because people will not use the correct, best, accurate answer (in cases such as Android) while X
is true. Therefore the current status should be updated.
So I did suggested edit using strikethrough for the phrase that is no longer true, small grammar change, and added "(fixed") text after the issue.
That keeps the original intent of the post, no content is lost, no extra noise and brings outside linked information inside the post.
How is that not a good edit?!?