I'm not sure if this qualifies as a bug or not (although it looks like one), but I can tell you what happens.
Your edits were, as you've already noticed by now, conflicted by OPs edits. However, the way the edits were prepopulated with your edit changes looks like a bug, or at least unintentional, and can be reproduced. This doesn't have to be done by OP, however - it can be done by 2k users as well.
For 2k users, here's a manual repro guide:
- Find a post with a pending edit
- Copy the ID of the post
- Bypass the editing restrictions by navigating to
https://stackoverflow.com/posts/Post ID here/edit
- The text fields will be edited to contain the exact changes the pending edit has, and the summary will contain whatever the pending edit had as well.
This can also be done by any post owner, provided the edit conveniently happens to be on their post. Clicking "edit" on a revision (https://stackoverflow.com/posts/Post ID here/revisions
) does not reproduce this problem - it starts a fresh edit off the revision you picked.
So yeah, those edits are your edits, just submitted by someone else. I can't tell you what happened in the case of your edits - all the posts you edited have OPs with low rep, so there could be a bug in the way edits are handled that triggers the bypass, it could be a websocket issue (OP's client didn't get an update on the edit, and when the standalone editor was launched, it got pre-populated with your edit), or it could be intentional. That being said, I don't see much of a reason why it would be intentional, given the users being low-rep users. I doubt 3 different cases are triggered by a somewhat hidden issue (bug?) intentionally when those users are low-rep.
The client not receiving the edit and triggering the bypass is also consistent with the small additions you mentioned. I'm guessing most of those users have no idea where the rest of the changes came from, unless they saw the review after (again, assuming the websocket disconnect theory holds).