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replaced http://meta.stackexchange.com/ with https://meta.stackexchange.com/
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Sorry, could not find any more 'h' words to alliterate in the title.

Broad context: The question to "The Answer" about branch prediction turned into Community Wiki

It is clear that high-traffic, high-score posts attract edit trolls/rep scavengers and strain SO moderation resources. Some of the egregious edits get robo-reviewed which leads to grief and suffering.

I think Stack Overflow needs more fine-grained logic when setting review rules for the gems of our Q&A collection (no other SE sites have the traffic to warrant such measures, so I'm not posting this on Meta SE).

My suggestion is as follows (numerical parameters subject to discussion and tuning based on data):

  1. Definitions: Edit-protection is a condition set on a post, meaning the post:
  • can be edited by moderators and the original poster only;
  • allows normal up- and downvoting;
  • allows adding comments as usual.
  1. As soon as a post's net score gets over 100, three rules kick in:
  • Edit reviewers must be in consensus before an edit is approved.
  • Number of edit reviewers to approve an edit is increased.
  • The post gets onto a watch list.
  1. If a post on the watch list receives 5 edit suggestions (obviously, this number needs tuning!) it is edit-protected.

  2. Any time a mod sees unusually high number of suggested edits on a post on the watch list he/she can edit-protect the post.

Opinions and critique are very much welcome.

Another related question on Meta SE (why we still need the ability to edit old content): How do we encourage edits to obsolete/out of date answers?How do we encourage edits to obsolete/out of date answers?

Relevant queries on Data SE: https://data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/429677/suggested-edits-vs-post-score-on-stack-overflow (suggests we are dealing with 775 posts with score>=100 and number of successful edits by non-owner>=10 - not overwhelming but also not insignificant in terms of mod/reviewer burden).

Sorry, could not find any more 'h' words to alliterate in the title.

Broad context: The question to "The Answer" about branch prediction turned into Community Wiki

It is clear that high-traffic, high-score posts attract edit trolls/rep scavengers and strain SO moderation resources. Some of the egregious edits get robo-reviewed which leads to grief and suffering.

I think Stack Overflow needs more fine-grained logic when setting review rules for the gems of our Q&A collection (no other SE sites have the traffic to warrant such measures, so I'm not posting this on Meta SE).

My suggestion is as follows (numerical parameters subject to discussion and tuning based on data):

  1. Definitions: Edit-protection is a condition set on a post, meaning the post:
  • can be edited by moderators and the original poster only;
  • allows normal up- and downvoting;
  • allows adding comments as usual.
  1. As soon as a post's net score gets over 100, three rules kick in:
  • Edit reviewers must be in consensus before an edit is approved.
  • Number of edit reviewers to approve an edit is increased.
  • The post gets onto a watch list.
  1. If a post on the watch list receives 5 edit suggestions (obviously, this number needs tuning!) it is edit-protected.

  2. Any time a mod sees unusually high number of suggested edits on a post on the watch list he/she can edit-protect the post.

Opinions and critique are very much welcome.

Another related question on Meta SE (why we still need the ability to edit old content): How do we encourage edits to obsolete/out of date answers?

Relevant queries on Data SE: https://data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/429677/suggested-edits-vs-post-score-on-stack-overflow (suggests we are dealing with 775 posts with score>=100 and number of successful edits by non-owner>=10 - not overwhelming but also not insignificant in terms of mod/reviewer burden).

Sorry, could not find any more 'h' words to alliterate in the title.

Broad context: The question to "The Answer" about branch prediction turned into Community Wiki

It is clear that high-traffic, high-score posts attract edit trolls/rep scavengers and strain SO moderation resources. Some of the egregious edits get robo-reviewed which leads to grief and suffering.

I think Stack Overflow needs more fine-grained logic when setting review rules for the gems of our Q&A collection (no other SE sites have the traffic to warrant such measures, so I'm not posting this on Meta SE).

My suggestion is as follows (numerical parameters subject to discussion and tuning based on data):

  1. Definitions: Edit-protection is a condition set on a post, meaning the post:
  • can be edited by moderators and the original poster only;
  • allows normal up- and downvoting;
  • allows adding comments as usual.
  1. As soon as a post's net score gets over 100, three rules kick in:
  • Edit reviewers must be in consensus before an edit is approved.
  • Number of edit reviewers to approve an edit is increased.
  • The post gets onto a watch list.
  1. If a post on the watch list receives 5 edit suggestions (obviously, this number needs tuning!) it is edit-protected.

  2. Any time a mod sees unusually high number of suggested edits on a post on the watch list he/she can edit-protect the post.

Opinions and critique are very much welcome.

Another related question on Meta SE (why we still need the ability to edit old content): How do we encourage edits to obsolete/out of date answers?

Relevant queries on Data SE: https://data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/429677/suggested-edits-vs-post-score-on-stack-overflow (suggests we are dealing with 775 posts with score>=100 and number of successful edits by non-owner>=10 - not overwhelming but also not insignificant in terms of mod/reviewer burden).

replaced http://meta.stackoverflow.com/ with https://meta.stackoverflow.com/
Source Link

Sorry, could not find any more 'h' words to alliterate in the title.

Broad context: The question to "The Answer" about branch prediction turned into Community WikiThe question to "The Answer" about branch prediction turned into Community Wiki

It is clear that high-traffic, high-score posts attract edit trolls/rep scavengers and strain SO moderation resources. Some of the egregious edits get robo-reviewed which leads to grief and suffering.

I think Stack Overflow needs more fine-grained logic when setting review rules for the gems of our Q&A collection (no other SE sites have the traffic to warrant such measures, so I'm not posting this on Meta SE).

My suggestion is as follows (numerical parameters subject to discussion and tuning based on data):

  1. Definitions: Edit-protection is a condition set on a post, meaning the post:
  • can be edited by moderators and the original poster only;
  • allows normal up- and downvoting;
  • allows adding comments as usual.
  1. As soon as a post's net score gets over 100, three rules kick in:
  • Edit reviewers must be in consensus before an edit is approved.
  • Number of edit reviewers to approve an edit is increased.
  • The post gets onto a watch list.
  1. If a post on the watch list receives 5 edit suggestions (obviously, this number needs tuning!) it is edit-protected.

  2. Any time a mod sees unusually high number of suggested edits on a post on the watch list he/she can edit-protect the post.

Opinions and critique are very much welcome.

Another related question on Meta SE (why we still need the ability to edit old content): How do we encourage edits to obsolete/out of date answers?

Relevant queries on Data SE: https://data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/429677/suggested-edits-vs-post-score-on-stack-overflow (suggests we are dealing with 775 posts with score>=100 and number of successful edits by non-owner>=10 - not overwhelming but also not insignificant in terms of mod/reviewer burden).

Sorry, could not find any more 'h' words to alliterate in the title.

Broad context: The question to "The Answer" about branch prediction turned into Community Wiki

It is clear that high-traffic, high-score posts attract edit trolls/rep scavengers and strain SO moderation resources. Some of the egregious edits get robo-reviewed which leads to grief and suffering.

I think Stack Overflow needs more fine-grained logic when setting review rules for the gems of our Q&A collection (no other SE sites have the traffic to warrant such measures, so I'm not posting this on Meta SE).

My suggestion is as follows (numerical parameters subject to discussion and tuning based on data):

  1. Definitions: Edit-protection is a condition set on a post, meaning the post:
  • can be edited by moderators and the original poster only;
  • allows normal up- and downvoting;
  • allows adding comments as usual.
  1. As soon as a post's net score gets over 100, three rules kick in:
  • Edit reviewers must be in consensus before an edit is approved.
  • Number of edit reviewers to approve an edit is increased.
  • The post gets onto a watch list.
  1. If a post on the watch list receives 5 edit suggestions (obviously, this number needs tuning!) it is edit-protected.

  2. Any time a mod sees unusually high number of suggested edits on a post on the watch list he/she can edit-protect the post.

Opinions and critique are very much welcome.

Another related question on Meta SE (why we still need the ability to edit old content): How do we encourage edits to obsolete/out of date answers?

Relevant queries on Data SE: https://data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/429677/suggested-edits-vs-post-score-on-stack-overflow (suggests we are dealing with 775 posts with score>=100 and number of successful edits by non-owner>=10 - not overwhelming but also not insignificant in terms of mod/reviewer burden).

Sorry, could not find any more 'h' words to alliterate in the title.

Broad context: The question to "The Answer" about branch prediction turned into Community Wiki

It is clear that high-traffic, high-score posts attract edit trolls/rep scavengers and strain SO moderation resources. Some of the egregious edits get robo-reviewed which leads to grief and suffering.

I think Stack Overflow needs more fine-grained logic when setting review rules for the gems of our Q&A collection (no other SE sites have the traffic to warrant such measures, so I'm not posting this on Meta SE).

My suggestion is as follows (numerical parameters subject to discussion and tuning based on data):

  1. Definitions: Edit-protection is a condition set on a post, meaning the post:
  • can be edited by moderators and the original poster only;
  • allows normal up- and downvoting;
  • allows adding comments as usual.
  1. As soon as a post's net score gets over 100, three rules kick in:
  • Edit reviewers must be in consensus before an edit is approved.
  • Number of edit reviewers to approve an edit is increased.
  • The post gets onto a watch list.
  1. If a post on the watch list receives 5 edit suggestions (obviously, this number needs tuning!) it is edit-protected.

  2. Any time a mod sees unusually high number of suggested edits on a post on the watch list he/she can edit-protect the post.

Opinions and critique are very much welcome.

Another related question on Meta SE (why we still need the ability to edit old content): How do we encourage edits to obsolete/out of date answers?

Relevant queries on Data SE: https://data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/429677/suggested-edits-vs-post-score-on-stack-overflow (suggests we are dealing with 775 posts with score>=100 and number of successful edits by non-owner>=10 - not overwhelming but also not insignificant in terms of mod/reviewer burden).

I helped Deer Hunter out with the title, also made some grammaticaly adjustments to the post
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TylerH
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Heuristics for protecting Harness helpful heuristics to protect historically significant, high value-value/high score-score posts

Sorry, could not find any more 'h' words to alliterate in the title.

Broad context: The question to "The Answer" about branch prediction turned into Community Wiki

It is clear that high-traffic, high-score posts attract edit trolls/repscavengersrep scavengers and strain SO moderation resources. Some of the egregious edits get roboreviewedrobo-reviewed which leads to grief and suffering.

Think SOI think Stack Overflow needs more fine-grained logic when setting review rules for the gems of our Q&A collection (no other SE sites have the traffic to warrant such measures, so I'm not posting this on Meta SE).

My suggestion is as follows (numerical parameters subject to discussion and tuning based on data):

  1. Definitions: Edit-protection is a condition set on a post which, meaning the post:
  • can be edited by moderators and the original poster only;
  • allows normal up- and downvoting;
  • allows adding comments as usual.
  1. As soon as a post's net score gets over 100, three rules kick in:
  • Edit reviewers must be in consensus before an edit is approved.
  • Number of edit reviewers to approve an edit is increased.
  • The post gets onto a watchlistwatch list.
  1. If a post on the watchlistwatch list receives 5 edit suggestions (obviously, this number needs tuning!) it is edit-protected.

  2. Any time a mod sees unusually high number of suggested edits on a post on the watchlistwatch list he/she can edit-protect the post.

Opinions and critique are very much welcome.

Another related question on Meta SE (why we still need the ability to edit old content): How do we encourage edits to obsolete/out of date answers?

Relevant queries on Data SE: https://data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/429677/suggested-edits-vs-post-score-on-stack-overflow (suggests we are dealing with 775 posts with score>=100 and number of successful edits by non-owner>=10 - not overwhelming but also not insignificant in terms of mod/reviewer burden).

Heuristics for protecting historically significant high value/high score posts

Sorry, could not find any more 'h' words to alliterate in the title.

Broad context: The question to "The Answer" about branch prediction turned into Community Wiki

It is clear that high-traffic, high-score posts attract edit trolls/repscavengers and strain SO moderation resources. Some of the egregious edits get roboreviewed which leads to grief and suffering.

Think SO needs more fine-grained logic when setting review rules for the gems of our Q&A collection (no other SE sites have the traffic to warrant such measures, so I'm not posting this on Meta SE).

My suggestion is as follows (numerical parameters subject to discussion and tuning based on data):

  1. Definitions: Edit-protection is a condition set on a post which
  • can be edited by moderators and the original poster only;
  • allows normal up- and downvoting;
  • allows adding comments as usual.
  1. As soon as a post's net score gets over 100, three rules kick in:
  • Edit reviewers must be in consensus before an edit is approved.
  • Number of edit reviewers to approve an edit is increased.
  • The post gets onto a watchlist.
  1. If a post on the watchlist receives 5 edit suggestions (obviously, this number needs tuning!) it is edit-protected.

  2. Any time a mod sees unusually high number of suggested edits on a post on the watchlist he/she can edit-protect the post.

Opinions and critique are very much welcome.

Another related question on Meta SE (why we still need the ability to edit old content): How do we encourage edits to obsolete/out of date answers?

Relevant queries on Data SE: https://data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/429677/suggested-edits-vs-post-score-on-stack-overflow (suggests we are dealing with 775 posts with score>=100 and number of successful edits by non-owner>=10 - not overwhelming but also not insignificant in terms of mod/reviewer burden).

Harness helpful heuristics to protect historically significant, high-value/high-score posts

Sorry, could not find any more 'h' words to alliterate in the title.

Broad context: The question to "The Answer" about branch prediction turned into Community Wiki

It is clear that high-traffic, high-score posts attract edit trolls/rep scavengers and strain SO moderation resources. Some of the egregious edits get robo-reviewed which leads to grief and suffering.

I think Stack Overflow needs more fine-grained logic when setting review rules for the gems of our Q&A collection (no other SE sites have the traffic to warrant such measures, so I'm not posting this on Meta SE).

My suggestion is as follows (numerical parameters subject to discussion and tuning based on data):

  1. Definitions: Edit-protection is a condition set on a post, meaning the post:
  • can be edited by moderators and the original poster only;
  • allows normal up- and downvoting;
  • allows adding comments as usual.
  1. As soon as a post's net score gets over 100, three rules kick in:
  • Edit reviewers must be in consensus before an edit is approved.
  • Number of edit reviewers to approve an edit is increased.
  • The post gets onto a watch list.
  1. If a post on the watch list receives 5 edit suggestions (obviously, this number needs tuning!) it is edit-protected.

  2. Any time a mod sees unusually high number of suggested edits on a post on the watch list he/she can edit-protect the post.

Opinions and critique are very much welcome.

Another related question on Meta SE (why we still need the ability to edit old content): How do we encourage edits to obsolete/out of date answers?

Relevant queries on Data SE: https://data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/429677/suggested-edits-vs-post-score-on-stack-overflow (suggests we are dealing with 775 posts with score>=100 and number of successful edits by non-owner>=10 - not overwhelming but also not insignificant in terms of mod/reviewer burden).

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gnat
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Comments = allowed
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George's idea used to refine the definition.
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