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Matt was curious about this a while back, so together we dug into the data.we dug into the data. Turns out that over the past 365 days,

Your concern was particularly focused on "robo-reviewers", or people who might use their privilege frequently without careful thought. We looked into this as well, focusing on the top 100 users of the hammerfocusing on the top 100 users of the hammer:

It's useful to also consider the number of questions reopened using the "hammer" - and how many of the questions reopened were closed by the person reopening themthe number of questions reopened using the "hammer" - and how many of the questions reopened were closed by the person reopening them. Closing a question in need of clarification and then reopening it upon receiving that clarification is one of the most satisfying uses of this tool, in my opinion:

Matt was curious about this a while back, so together we dug into the data. Turns out that over the past 365 days,

Your concern was particularly focused on "robo-reviewers", or people who might use their privilege frequently without careful thought. We looked into this as well, focusing on the top 100 users of the hammer:

It's useful to also consider the number of questions reopened using the "hammer" - and how many of the questions reopened were closed by the person reopening them. Closing a question in need of clarification and then reopening it upon receiving that clarification is one of the most satisfying uses of this tool, in my opinion:

Matt was curious about this a while back, so together we dug into the data. Turns out that over the past 365 days,

Your concern was particularly focused on "robo-reviewers", or people who might use their privilege frequently without careful thought. We looked into this as well, focusing on the top 100 users of the hammer:

It's useful to also consider the number of questions reopened using the "hammer" - and how many of the questions reopened were closed by the person reopening them. Closing a question in need of clarification and then reopening it upon receiving that clarification is one of the most satisfying uses of this tool, in my opinion:

replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
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MattMatt was curious about this a while back, so together we dug into the data. Turns out that over the past 365 days,

Matt was curious about this a while back, so together we dug into the data. Turns out that over the past 365 days,

Matt was curious about this a while back, so together we dug into the data. Turns out that over the past 365 days,

replaced http://meta.stackexchange.com/ with https://meta.stackexchange.com/
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  • 55,982 questions were closed using the "hammer". Of these, 4,090 were later reopened - an "error rate" of about 7% (note that "error" here ignores questions that were legitimately closed, then edited, then reopened; modifying the query to account for these is left as an exercise for the reader).
  • 10,193 questions were closed by the system in response to affirmation from the asker themselvesaffirmation from the asker themselves. Of these, 134 were later reopened, for an error rate of about 1%.
  • 8565 questions were closed as duplicates in the normal fashion, by voters or moderators. Of those, 259 were later reopened, for an error rate of about 3%.
  • 55,982 questions were closed using the "hammer". Of these, 4,090 were later reopened - an "error rate" of about 7% (note that "error" here ignores questions that were legitimately closed, then edited, then reopened; modifying the query to account for these is left as an exercise for the reader).
  • 10,193 questions were closed by the system in response to affirmation from the asker themselves. Of these, 134 were later reopened, for an error rate of about 1%.
  • 8565 questions were closed as duplicates in the normal fashion, by voters or moderators. Of those, 259 were later reopened, for an error rate of about 3%.
  • 55,982 questions were closed using the "hammer". Of these, 4,090 were later reopened - an "error rate" of about 7% (note that "error" here ignores questions that were legitimately closed, then edited, then reopened; modifying the query to account for these is left as an exercise for the reader).
  • 10,193 questions were closed by the system in response to affirmation from the asker themselves. Of these, 134 were later reopened, for an error rate of about 1%.
  • 8565 questions were closed as duplicates in the normal fashion, by voters or moderators. Of those, 259 were later reopened, for an error rate of about 3%.
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