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.