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Post Closed as "Not suitable for this site" by Martijn Pieters
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Jon Ericson Staff
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typo
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Knu
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Problem case:

Right now in documentation, it takes one user to approve an edit. This is subject to change, but in general, not many users will be necessary for this.

How the distribution of ownership on documentation currently works opens up a horrible door for abuse.

Say, someone proposes an edit that makes an example into utter garbage (changing many lines) and somehow get it approved (maybe people were robo-reviewing or their friends approved it).

Now, regardless of if we correct this through subsequent edits, that user will recieve rep from that post forever. That means that malicious actors currently have a way to tap into the rep-stream of any popular post, through destructive edits, and save alerting a CM there is no way to put a stop to it.

Proposal:

Add a way to request to "rollback" an edit with prejudice. Have multiple people confirm the edit was deliberately destructive or garbage. In that case, remove all reputation the editor recievedreceived from the post, and apply an administrative penalty to them. (Maybe -10 rep or -20 even).

Furthermore, have people that approved many such edits be reviewed by moderators and potentially issued a review ban.

Problem case:

Right now in documentation, it takes one user to approve an edit. This is subject to change, but in general, not many users will be necessary for this.

How the distribution of ownership on documentation currently works opens up a horrible door for abuse.

Say, someone proposes an edit that makes an example into utter garbage (changing many lines) and somehow get it approved (maybe people were robo-reviewing or their friends approved it).

Now, regardless of if we correct this through subsequent edits, that user will recieve rep from that post forever. That means that malicious actors currently have a way to tap into the rep-stream of any popular post, through destructive edits, and save alerting a CM there is no way to put a stop to it.

Proposal:

Add a way to request to "rollback" an edit with prejudice. Have multiple people confirm the edit was deliberately destructive or garbage. In that case, remove all reputation the editor recieved from the post, and apply an administrative penalty to them. (Maybe -10 rep or -20 even).

Furthermore, have people that approved many such edits be reviewed by moderators and potentially issued a review ban.

Problem case:

Right now in documentation, it takes one user to approve an edit. This is subject to change, but in general, not many users will be necessary for this.

How the distribution of ownership on documentation currently works opens up a horrible door for abuse.

Say, someone proposes an edit that makes an example into utter garbage (changing many lines) and somehow get it approved (maybe people were robo-reviewing or their friends approved it).

Now, regardless of if we correct this through subsequent edits, that user will recieve rep from that post forever. That means that malicious actors currently have a way to tap into the rep-stream of any popular post, through destructive edits, and save alerting a CM there is no way to put a stop to it.

Proposal:

Add a way to request to "rollback" an edit with prejudice. Have multiple people confirm the edit was deliberately destructive or garbage. In that case, remove all reputation the editor received from the post, and apply an administrative penalty to them. (Maybe -10 rep or -20 even).

Furthermore, have people that approved many such edits be reviewed by moderators and potentially issued a review ban.

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Magisch
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Documentation: Add a way to reject or roll back an edit with prejudice

Problem case:

Right now in documentation, it takes one user to approve an edit. This is subject to change, but in general, not many users will be necessary for this.

How the distribution of ownership on documentation currently works opens up a horrible door for abuse.

Say, someone proposes an edit that makes an example into utter garbage (changing many lines) and somehow get it approved (maybe people were robo-reviewing or their friends approved it).

Now, regardless of if we correct this through subsequent edits, that user will recieve rep from that post forever. That means that malicious actors currently have a way to tap into the rep-stream of any popular post, through destructive edits, and save alerting a CM there is no way to put a stop to it.

Proposal:

Add a way to request to "rollback" an edit with prejudice. Have multiple people confirm the edit was deliberately destructive or garbage. In that case, remove all reputation the editor recieved from the post, and apply an administrative penalty to them. (Maybe -10 rep or -20 even).

Furthermore, have people that approved many such edits be reviewed by moderators and potentially issued a review ban.