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#Yes!

Yes!

Rolling back is only used in the circumstance that the edit shouldn't have been approved. If it shouldn't have been approved, there shouldn't be a rep award. Additionally, it means that the approvers of it were wrong and a review ban should be considered (auto-flag raise?).

Yes, people might hunt for bad editors and do mass-rollbacks. Oh noes! That might improve post quality and catch robo-approvers!

No, using rollbacks as an attack is not going to happen because a) you need 2k to rollback b) bumping it to the homepage so other people notice is not a good idea, and c) downvoting is a more obvious option.

#Yes!

Rolling back is only used in the circumstance that the edit shouldn't have been approved. If it shouldn't have been approved, there shouldn't be a rep award. Additionally, it means that the approvers of it were wrong and a review ban should be considered (auto-flag raise?).

Yes, people might hunt for bad editors and do mass-rollbacks. Oh noes! That might improve post quality and catch robo-approvers!

No, using rollbacks as an attack is not going to happen because a) you need 2k to rollback b) bumping it to the homepage so other people notice is not a good idea, and c) downvoting is a more obvious option.

Yes!

Rolling back is only used in the circumstance that the edit shouldn't have been approved. If it shouldn't have been approved, there shouldn't be a rep award. Additionally, it means that the approvers of it were wrong and a review ban should be considered (auto-flag raise?).

Yes, people might hunt for bad editors and do mass-rollbacks. Oh noes! That might improve post quality and catch robo-approvers!

No, using rollbacks as an attack is not going to happen because a) you need 2k to rollback b) bumping it to the homepage so other people notice is not a good idea, and c) downvoting is a more obvious option.

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bjb568
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#Yes!

Rolling back is only used in the circumstance that the edit shouldn't have been approved. If it shouldn't have been approved, there shouldn't be a rep award. Additionally, it means that the approvers of it were wrong and a review ban should be considered (auto-flag raise?).

Yes, people might hunt for bad editors and do mass-rollbacks. Oh noes! That might improve post quality and catch robo-approvers!

No, using rollbacks as an attack is not going to happen because a) you need 2k to rollback b) bumping it to the homepage so other people notice is not a good idea, and c) downvoting is a more obvious option.