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Our primary tool is simply sending the user a moderator message, which I have also done. This lets us identify specific behaviors with the user, explain why they're inappropriate, and hopefully improve their habits in the future. However, edits being approved is not entirely the editor's fault. If their edits had been rejected appropriately, they would have hit an edit ban that stops them dead in their tracks, and would have told them to review their suggestions to find out why they're being rejected. This is also the reviewers' fault.

More recently, moderators gained the ability to add custom messages to review bans for users. This allows us to explicitly identify a post that we want the user to look at in order to understand why they were banned, rather than just throwing a "you're banned" message out and expecting their behavior to change.

This is exactly what I've done here. I've gone through every suggested edit the user made, found all the truly terrible ones, and banned 26 reviewers for a day (24 hours), pointing out the particular reviews that they shouldn't have voted to approve. Many of these reviewers showed up multiple times across different reviews (and a couple of them had already hit an automated block for failing audits).

Generally, we do prefer you flag cases like this for moderator attention and include as much detail as possible, simply because we don't really like when you call out specific users here on Meta (that's why we actively destroy the tag whenever it pops up - that's not something we want to encourage). I would suggest finding one or two of the most atrocious examples you can and then mentioning that many of their suggestions follow a similar pattern. It should trigger an investigation.

Keep in mind that we only recommend flagging a user for their editing behavior if there is a clear pattern of abuse. If they made one or two bad edits, especially if they got rejected, please don't bother us with it.

Also related:

Our primary tool is simply sending the user a moderator message, which I have also done. This lets us identify specific behaviors with the user, explain why they're inappropriate, and hopefully improve their habits in the future. However, edits being approved is not entirely the editor's fault. If their edits had been rejected appropriately, they would have hit an edit ban that stops them dead in their tracks, and would have told them to review their suggestions to find out why they're being rejected. This is also the reviewers' fault.

More recently, moderators gained the ability to add custom messages to review bans for users. This allows us to explicitly identify a post that we want the user to look at in order to understand why they were banned, rather than just throwing a "you're banned" message out and expecting their behavior to change.

This is exactly what I've done here. I've gone through every suggested edit the user made, found all the truly terrible ones, and banned 26 reviewers for a day (24 hours), pointing out the particular reviews that they shouldn't have voted to approve. Many of these reviewers showed up multiple times across different reviews (and a couple of them had already hit an automated block for failing audits).

Generally, we do prefer you flag cases like this for moderator attention and include as much detail as possible, simply because we don't really like when you call out specific users here on Meta (that's why we actively destroy the tag whenever it pops up - that's not something we want to encourage). I would suggest finding one or two of the most atrocious examples you can and then mentioning that many of their suggestions follow a similar pattern. It should trigger an investigation.

Keep in mind that we only recommend flagging a user for their editing behavior if there is a clear pattern of abuse. If they made one or two bad edits, especially if they got rejected, please don't bother us with it.

Also related:

Our primary tool is simply sending the user a moderator message, which I have also done. This lets us identify specific behaviors with the user, explain why they're inappropriate, and hopefully improve their habits in the future. However, edits being approved is not entirely the editor's fault. If their edits had been rejected appropriately, they would have hit an edit ban that stops them dead in their tracks, and would have told them to review their suggestions to find out why they're being rejected. This is also the reviewers' fault.

More recently, moderators gained the ability to add custom messages to review bans for users. This allows us to explicitly identify a post that we want the user to look at in order to understand why they were banned, rather than just throwing a "you're banned" message out and expecting their behavior to change.

This is exactly what I've done here. I've gone through every suggested edit the user made, found all the truly terrible ones, and banned 26 reviewers for a day (24 hours), pointing out the particular reviews that they shouldn't have voted to approve. Many of these reviewers showed up multiple times across different reviews (and a couple of them had already hit an automated block for failing audits).

Generally, we do prefer you flag cases like this for moderator attention and include as much detail as possible, simply because we don't really like when you call out specific users here on Meta (that's why we actively destroy the tag whenever it pops up - that's not something we want to encourage). I would suggest finding one or two of the most atrocious examples you can and then mentioning that many of their suggestions follow a similar pattern. It should trigger an investigation.

Keep in mind that we only recommend flagging a user for their editing behavior if there is a clear pattern of abuse. If they made one or two bad edits, especially if they got rejected, please don't bother us with it.

Also related:

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animuson StaffMod
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Our primary tool is simply sending the user a moderator message, which I have also done. This lets us identify specific behaviors with the user, explain why they're inappropriate, and hopefully improve their habits in the future. However, edits being approved is not entirely the editor's fault. If their edits had been rejected appropriately, they would have hit an edit ban that stops them dead in their tracks, and would have told them to review their suggestions to find out why they're being rejected. This is also the reviewers' fault.

More recently, moderators gained the ability to add custom messages to review bans for users. This allows us to explicitly identify a post that we want the user to look at in order to understand why they were banned, rather than just throwing a "you're banned" message out and expecting their behavior to change.

This is exactly what I've done here. I've gone through every suggested edit the user made, found all the truly terrible ones, and banned 26 reviewers for a day (24 hours), pointing out the particular reviews that they shouldn't have voted to approve. Many of these reviewers showed up multiple times across different reviews (and a couple of them had already hit an automated block for failing audits).

Generally, we do prefer you flag cases like this for moderator attention and include as much detail as possible, simply because we don't really like when you call out specific users here on Meta (that's why we actively destroy the tag whenever it pops up - that's not something we want to encourage). I would suggest finding one or two of the most atrocious examples you can and then mentioning that many of their suggestions follow a similar pattern. It should trigger an investigation.

Keep in mind that we only recommend flagging a user for their editing behavior if there is a clear pattern of abuse. If they made one or two bad edits, especially if they got rejected, please don't bother us with it.

Also related: