Timeline for Confusing review audits caused by adding unrelated tags
Current License: CC BY-SA 3.0
4 events
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Sep 26, 2014 at 18:47 | comment | added | Brad Werth | I had wondered if some of this was just technological limitations compromising the ideal business logic. I've never scaled a site out to anywhere near as large as SO, I'm sure there are some unique challenges there. It is somewhat hard to imagine that there are very many actively reviewed tags that don't have at least a small handful of extremely good/bad questions to select from. It seems like, for the few that might not, it may not even be an issue. If the volume is low, and review audits happen every 50 (or whatever) reviews, it probably wouldn't even really come up. | |
Sep 26, 2014 at 17:59 | comment | added | Shog9 | This would work for some tags, @Brad - but not all; we would still have to fall back on the current behavior if too few questions were available. Also, slow. Worth considering in the future, as we move away from trying to choose audits on the fly though. | |
Sep 26, 2014 at 17:09 | comment | added | Brad Werth | Thanks for your feedback, as always. Unfortunately, it seems to address one specific review, rather than the question of "Is sticking the specific tag into completely unrelated items really the best way to solve this?". As indicated in the comments, there are 52,551 questions tagged ruby. Do we really need to mine the scala questions in order to find good review questions? It seems a proper review would be a real bad/good question from the pool being reviewed... | |
Sep 26, 2014 at 17:05 | history | answered | Shog9 | CC BY-SA 3.0 |