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Jun 3, 2020 at 15:29 history edited CommunityBot
Commonmark migration
Mar 20, 2017 at 9:14 history edited CommunityBot
replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
Sep 12, 2014 at 14:50 comment added Eduard Luca So I guess to sum up, people should come to Meta each time something's not clear. Still thing it's an overhead, but hey, who am I to argue.
Sep 12, 2014 at 14:50 vote accept Eduard Luca
Sep 11, 2014 at 15:22 comment added Infinite Recursion I agree, I am indeed that kind of a person. I can now understand your point of view @Servy.
Sep 11, 2014 at 15:13 comment added Servy @InfiniteRecursion I find that answer conflicting. It says that he agrees with this answer, yet at the same time it states, "They are meant to be good enough to get people to pay attention." That's pretty well supporting my point, that the audits don't really teach, they just assert people are paying attention. I'd also like to take a second to point out that someone like you who is willing to take the time to go to meta, read around, learn how to review properly, etc. is someone who, most likely, would have done all of those things even in a world without audits. Most people don't do that.
Sep 11, 2014 at 15:10 comment added Servy @gnat Really? I thought your point was that nobody is going to read it anyway? Well, now that you've mentioned the FAQ, and we agree that it's wrong (?), you've now succeeded in enhancing my assertion by acknowledging the misleading FAQ entry. Thanks.
Sep 11, 2014 at 15:09 comment added Infinite Recursion @Servy: Incorrect? Others don't think so. Review audits make some users rant (the ones that refuse to learn), but that is not the entire picture. There are lots of new users who learn from review bans, just because they don't rant on Meta, it doesn't mean audits don't teach.
Sep 11, 2014 at 15:06 comment added gnat @Servy my point is, your explanation of why answer is incorrect doesn't look compelling. Actually, given that you didn't refer faq (even in form like "despite faq stating otherwise"), some may argue that it looks ignorant
Sep 11, 2014 at 14:58 comment added Servy @gnat Okay. What's your point? My point is that this answer is incorrect and that audits aren't actually helping most reviewers become better reviewers. You point simply seems to be that some new users are going to expect audits to make them better reviewers despite the fact that they won't. That's certainly true. Some people will mistakenly believe that audits are teaching people how to review properly. That's a problem, and we should fix it.
Sep 11, 2014 at 14:38 comment added gnat @Servy whatever you state about FAQ here, it's merely a 20th or 30th comment buried deep down below in heavily downvoted obscure discussion at a per site meta. No matter how loud you challenge it here, in the comments, the matter of fact is, people ain't going to search every single meta out there only to find that you declared faq wrong. They will go to the faq and learn from there - unless of course there is a comparably visible challenge of some statement in it... but there isn't
Sep 11, 2014 at 14:21 comment added Servy @gnat And yet SE has stated, repeatedly, that that's not their intention, they don't accomplish that goal, and SE has stated that they have no intention of actually changing the audits so that they will accomplish that goal. Clearly the FAQ is wrong. It is not infallible. Every single other point of evidence, to which there is a lot of it, points to it being wrong.
Sep 11, 2014 at 14:10 comment added gnat @Servy I am merely addressing the statement about their purpose made in this comment: "purpose of audits are not to teach people how to review", pointing out that official faq currently says rather opposite: "designed to help new reviewers hone their moderation skills..."
Sep 11, 2014 at 14:02 comment added Servy @gnat So do you think that audits actually do a good job of actually teaching people how to review? Do you think that someone who is capable of passing all of the audits they see is going to be a good reviewer? If it is actually a primary goal of the system, contrary to repeated statements to the contrary, then it's certainly not a successful goal of the system. It doesn't do that, even if it should. I don't give a damn what the FAQ says on the subject, they don't actually accomplish what it says they do. If someone thinks that they do, they're mistaken.
Sep 11, 2014 at 8:29 comment added gnat @Servy if honestly, I don't give a $%^& about how many "occasions" were there. Thing is, when there is an official faq, people don't search and count "occasions" saying one way or another; instead they proceed straight to faq to learn how things are intended to work. If those whose "occasional" remarks you've read were honest / serious, they would put an effort into adjusting the faq... but they didn't
Sep 10, 2014 at 17:54 comment added Servy @gnat SE has specifically said on many occasions that the review system was designed to make sure that people are paying attention, and that it's not designed to ensure that the reviewer is actually a quality reviewer. It's been listed as an explicitly design goal that someone who has taken the time to read the post should be able to pass an audit. That's all it's designed to measure. Does it sometimes do more, sure, but that's not what it's designed to do, and when requests have been made to make audits more rigorous in the past have been declined for that reason.
Sep 10, 2014 at 17:48 comment added gnat @Servy "not to teach people how to review" -- really? have you read audits tag wiki and the faq referred from these? "designed to help new reviewers hone their moderation skills..."
Sep 10, 2014 at 15:00 comment added Infinite Recursion @Servy: My answer is too localized then. Let's wait till someone comes along and writes a wiki answer or a rant answer.
Sep 10, 2014 at 14:57 comment added Infinite Recursion @Eduard: The learning curve is slow, but it's worth the effort because effort is expected from reviewers. Janitor work is hard on SO, burns you out. Yet lots of users are actively cleaning up and keeping the site clean. Reviewing is not mandatory. But for those who do it, they are expected to invest the effort.
Sep 10, 2014 at 14:49 comment added Servy @InfiniteRecursion But it doesn't actually do that for the vast majority of users. Your example is an exception.
Sep 10, 2014 at 14:49 comment added Eduard Luca Nope, just got two. One was an honest mistake.
Sep 10, 2014 at 14:49 comment added Servy @EduardLuca Every once in a while there is a bad review, sure. Of the one audit you've gotten that you feel you did the right thing on, getting it wrong wouldn't result in you being banned. You must have gotten several other audits wrong to actually get banned.
Sep 10, 2014 at 14:48 comment added Eduard Luca Also, @InfiniteRecursion you say Because they help reviewers understand the review process. That's wrong, and you said it yourself in your comment. Audits help people understand that they made a mistake, but not why.
Sep 10, 2014 at 14:48 comment added Infinite Recursion I agree @Servy. Meta participation is important to understand what is good and what is bad. Audits are not useful as the only source of knowledge. It just pushes the user from SO proper to Meta. Get banned, visit Meta and learn how to review.
Sep 10, 2014 at 14:46 comment added Eduard Luca @Servy I don't agree (and that's the whole point of my post). There are lots of edge cases on audits (I got 2 so far and screwed up both of them -- with one, I still believe I did the correct thing). I'm just saying: tell people what they did wrong, so they don't do it again. And Infinite Recursion, yes, participating on Meta would somewhat solve this, but the learning curve is too slow IMO.
Sep 10, 2014 at 14:43 comment added Servy I agree that the rep limits for several of the review queues are way too low, and that this contributes to the number of very poor reviewers. My point is simply that if audits are the only tool you have to figure out how to review, you won't be a good reviewer. That's simply not what they're there to do. Learning enough about reviewing to pass audits still leaves you as a pretty poor reviewer, if that's your only source of knowledge on how to review.
Sep 10, 2014 at 14:41 comment added Infinite Recursion Some users innocently do bad reviews. It serves quite a bit of educational purpose when one is at 500 rep, and hesitates to cast downvotes on answers due to rep loss, or even edit posts. 500 rep is too low, you hardly know the software at that time, and the audits are a wake up call @Servy. After the ban, the "skip" button suddenly became visible to me, earlier I hardly noticed that it exists.
Sep 10, 2014 at 14:36 comment added Servy It's important to realize that the purpose of audits are not to teach people how to review. They're there to kick out the absolutely worst of the worst, the people that aren't paying the slightest bit of attention, basically, the bots. It's more or less just a captcha. Being able to pass the audits doesn't mean you're not a good reviewer, it means you're actually reading the posts in question. Or at least, that's how they were designed.
Sep 10, 2014 at 14:31 history answered Infinite Recursion CC BY-SA 3.0