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Several minutes ago I received a review ban:

You have made too many incorrect reviews. For an example of a task you should have reviewed differently, see: https://stackoverflow.com/review/first-posts/21733095.

Come back in 4 days to continue reviewing.

In my opinion, if just look at the question without the answer, this question doesn't seem a good question. With a simple Google search for the error message, a discussion in GitHub that gave a result before when this question is asked can be found easily, which indicates that this question didn't show an effort for solving question, I think. That's why I tried to downvote it. Then I was banned.

Showed this current-event question from a 11k+ asker has 17 upvotes, with a 32 upvotes self-accepted answer, I tried to search from MSO, and found some conclusions: Answers that have been upvoted in a short span of time, and are fairly recent, are chosen for "good" audits, though no system is perfect.

So what I want to ask is: The reason why this question is "good", is just the high upvote, or due to its good-enough quality? How can I prevent such audit failure in the future?

After all, I can't see the really well-researched self answer during reviewing.

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    It's not just the number of up votes, it's that no one had down voted the question. It's gotten 2 down votes now so it will no longer be chosen as an audit.
    – BSMP
    Dec 19, 2018 at 23:17
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    There is not much signal in just one failed audit, even though a post with 17 helpful votes ought to be easy. If you want real help then focus a bit on all the other audits you failed. Dec 19, 2018 at 23:27
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    @BSMP I am 3 accept or 4 upvote away from seeing vote :-) Thank you for tell me that.
    – Geno Chen
    Dec 20, 2018 at 5:37
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    You were not alone. 6 out of the 7 audits on that post were failed.
    – Ivar
    Dec 20, 2018 at 14:05

2 Answers 2

17

You got burned on this one.

So here's the deal - that particular package was compromised, and a hacker could use this as a way to mine Bitcoin. This was promptly yanked, as the answer on the question explains.

Sans context, you would never have known what this question was looking at. You did the review in the right way and got punished for it, which is...unfortunate.

The question has value since maintainers may wake up to discover an NPM dependency has suddenly disappeared on them and may be looking for the reasons why. In spite of the very good reason, there are still a lot of people out there who don't keep up with this kind of information and would be surprised by it.

Audits do this sometimes in that they give us what seem to be straightforward audit questions but have more nuance than the actual window provides for us. Flag for a moderator to look into this case and reference this Meta question and hopefully your ban will get lifted.

Although it doesn't take just one failed audit to get an audit ban...but I'd call Mulligan on this one.

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    "The question has value since maintainers may wake up to discover an NPM dependency has suddenly disappeared on them and may be looking for the reasons why. In spite of the very good reason, there are still a lot of people out there who don't keep up with this kind of information and would be surprised by it." But even before this question was asked you could just search on the error message, and see a good explanation of the problem and a description of what to do about it as the top result (which the SO question itself references). Thus the question was poorly researched.
    – Servy
    Dec 19, 2018 at 21:00
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    @Servy That's one of the reason why I downvote that question. Additionally, I don't know whether it is necessary that many breaking technical news should be reflected on SO like this.
    – Geno Chen
    Dec 19, 2018 at 21:15
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    @Servy: This is why I mention that the review was likely done correctly - seeing that same question sans context I too would've likely voted to close it - but in context, the question and answer is greater than the sum of its parts. It's also dominating the Google results list, since I can't really find useful info in the first few results except a handful of GitHub posts.
    – Makoto
    Dec 19, 2018 at 21:15
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    @Makoto I'm not seeing how in context the question is useful though. You're saying that you can't find any useful information on the topic except for some posts that describe the exact problem and what to do about it, which are useful (at also rank above it on Google, for the record). That post is just repeating what those other sources are already saying. Creating an SO post to just repeat the information already posted and readily accessible elsewhere seems like the epitomy of a "not well researched" and "not useful" post.
    – Servy
    Dec 19, 2018 at 21:19
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    @Makoto Oh, yes. Since the result lies in the very bottom in the GitHub post (which is the first search result), an anxious developer may ignore it and dive into other search result (may found nearly nothing on how to solve this issue quickly, if there isn't that SO question and answer).
    – Geno Chen
    Dec 19, 2018 at 21:25
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    @GenoChen: Yes, this is precisely my point. Skimming across these articles doesn't give me much closure, but reading the SO answer gives me tons of closure.
    – Makoto
    Dec 19, 2018 at 21:38
  • I upvoted the question itself because it is helpful, but you are right, this is a bad audit. I voted on question quality itself, not on audit suitability. Figuring out audit suitability belongs to the mods. Dec 20, 2018 at 13:03
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Before closing the question as "why isn't this code working" offtopic the context should be known (could be such question interesting for anybody else?). Actually, Meta's consensus is not only one important metainformation to evaluate the content. Surprise.

What is really unpleasant that we can't predict Meta's decision. Highly possible scenario is that the question will be closed and then reopened again.

During review I would skip it.

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    Skipping it is a bad choice. Sans context the action was appropriate.
    – Makoto
    Dec 19, 2018 at 23:56
  • I can't believe no one has offered to forbid the skip button yet... Dec 20, 2018 at 0:09
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    @RomanPokrovskij Skip means "I'm not certain" (which is totally ok). But the linked question - without the context - is indeed awful. The title is only the raw error message (strike one), context given is "I am trying to deploy my project and I'm suddenly getting this error." (whoa, don't give us that many details; strike two), followed - by the raw error message again (strike three, out)
    – CharonX
    Dec 20, 2018 at 15:52
  • This was how you explained to yourself why you have not downvoted or flaged it? Dec 20, 2018 at 16:06

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