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Dec 14, 2021 at 16:49 comment added vbnet3d Generally, as a user who used to do reviews but no longer does due to the nature of audits currently, I'm thinking that the audit should just look at the general nature of the reviewer's response - either positive or negative. It shouldn't require a specific action unless no other action is reasonable. As it stands, there's way too little tolerance.
Dec 14, 2021 at 11:11 comment added Gimby @justANewbie indeed, quality voting and providing feedback are two entirely different processes which do not need to be performed by the same people. Someone who hasn't voted can provide feedback too. Someone who upvoted can do so too.
Dec 14, 2021 at 9:30 answer added klutt timeline score: 9
Dec 14, 2021 at 6:37 comment added justANewb stands with Ukraine @KINYUATIMOTHYNJIRU There's a lot of problems with your statement. Firstly, Chris is not a moderator. He's just a normal contributor with over 500 rep, so he got access to the "First Answer" queue (and many more). The bigger problem is that you demand that each downvote also has a comment to explain. While a lot of people (including me) do give a comment, voting is meant to be private and you don't have to explain why you do it.
Dec 14, 2021 at 4:25 comment added Chris @O.Jones, partly because there's a lot of review that needs doing. As Jeremy says, there are many ways to contribute.
Dec 14, 2021 at 3:03 comment added Jeremy Caney @O.Jones: There are a number of roles needed to keep the community running. We each contribute according to our interests and abilities. Speaking for myself, I spend far more time reviewing than I do answering. The OP has obviously done both. The audit system certainly does need updating, though.
Dec 14, 2021 at 2:05 comment added O. Jones Why waste precious time on reviewing, when you can be contributing answers and questions, helping people do their best at this great trade of ours? Plus, due to the arcane rules and edge-case audits, it's like walking on eggshells.
Dec 13, 2021 at 23:20 history became hot meta post
Dec 13, 2021 at 19:19 comment added Machavity Mod I lifted the suspension. That second one is borderline enough it shouldn't be an audit
Dec 13, 2021 at 17:40 history edited Chris CC BY-SA 4.0
Add explicit suggestion to remove second post from review audits moving forward
Dec 13, 2021 at 16:29 comment added Chris "It's a game of recognizing audits, rather than you handling posts the way you feel they should be"—exactly. I understand the value of appropriate audits, but there should definitely be a way to deal with bad ones short of posting here every time. Bad audits help nobody and they frustrate experienced users who are just trying to contribute to the site.
Dec 13, 2021 at 16:17 comment added Kevin B [cont.] Because it's automatic, and because the review and curation systems themselves are primarily subjective, the audits are often mostly subjective... It's a game of recognizing audits, rather than you handling posts the way you feel they should be.
Dec 13, 2021 at 16:12 comment added Kevin B Very often, the audit system chooses "hot" posts, and posts that were dealt with by a mod, as the signal such posts present show them as being "obvious" examples that noone should fail because 13 people agreed it was useful, or a mod noted that it was clearly spam, etc.. What this fails to capture is that more often than not, these "hot" posts are simply popular, not good. and the mod handled spam is often unreasonably hard to spot, hence it not being automatically handled by regular user spam flags.
Dec 13, 2021 at 15:41 comment added Kevin B The discussion on poor quality review audits has been going on for nearly a decade now. The system is awful... and nothing has been or is being done about it. It's the same story every week, which is probably why your question and ones like it often get poorly received.
Dec 13, 2021 at 15:38 history edited Chris CC BY-SA 4.0
Try to refocus the conversation
Dec 13, 2021 at 12:06 comment added Chris "some of the authors do not even know who downvoted"—_nobody_ knows who downvoted except the person who cast the vote (and Stack Exchange staff). Not even moderators can see this information. "they should discourage ghost downvoting by coercing downvoters to leave a comment"—and upvoting an existing comment is effectively leaving a comment.
Dec 13, 2021 at 12:02 comment added Chris @KINYUATIMOTHYNJIRU, I also said that I upvoted an existing comment explaining why the answer is poor. What is more discouraging, one comment a few upvotes or several similar comments piling on? In any case, I didn't fail that review audit because of the downvote. Voting (both up and down) is an important part of how SO works: "Downvote answers that are incorrect or don't provide sufficient information to be useful in answering the question." That answer suggested something that OP had already tried and said as much in the question.
Dec 13, 2021 at 5:29 comment added user16612111 @JeremyCaney, leaving comments out is more helpful than leaving an anonymous downvote, some of the authors do not even know who downvoted , makes sense not to disclose who did the downvoting anyway, they should discourage ghost downvoting by coercing downvoters to leave a comment
Dec 13, 2021 at 4:50 comment added user16612111 @JeremyCaney, i said that because he says in his second review he did downvote the post and then upvoted comments without explaining why, could be downvote and run kind of behavior. The system needs to penalize downvotes without comments by 5 reputations or more so they provide reasons why.
Dec 13, 2021 at 4:38 comment added Jeremy Caney @KINYUATIMOTHYNJIRU: Technically, there’s a difference between moderators and reviewers. Both are volunteer positions, but moderators are elected, whereas anyone (with enough reputation) can be a reviewer. That’s also independent from downvoting, which any contributor with more than 125 reputation can do. You are able to downvote. With 200 more reputation, you’ll be able to participate in some of the review queues as well.
Dec 13, 2021 at 4:10 comment added user16612111 It is encouraging to learn that even moderators get banned and that's good riddance for all the downvoting they do to beginner's posts
Dec 12, 2021 at 20:19 comment added Jeremy Caney I’d really like the answer to this: “…it looks like a person who fails two audits out of 400 reviews is treated the same as somebody who fails two audits out of two reviews”. I received a suspension myself six weeks ago, and I suspect it fell into a similar scenario. I typically review 60-80 posts a day, and receive (and pass) maybe 2 or 3 audits each day. But I received a suspension for two failed audits 50 days apart. At minimum, it should take into account number of audits passed, if it doesn’t already, and especially given that there is a level of judgment expected in these queues.
Dec 12, 2021 at 19:25 comment added Jeremy Caney It’s worth noting that, according to the answer history, the second audit has been served up four times, with two of those (including yours) being failed due to ”Leave Feedback”. I myself got this review yesterday, didn’t recognize it as an audit, but lucked out by choosing “Skip”. The “Leave feedback” issue is especially pernicious since even unambiguously useful posts sometimes merit feedback, and I usually post custom comments through the “Leave feedback” dialogue so that my review history is less ambiguous.
Dec 12, 2021 at 16:45 comment added Chris Thanks, @Tom. That's helpful context. "Share feedback" effectively adds a comment, and typing out my own comment would have shown the "this is an audit" popup instead of generating a failed audit. It does feel like a bad design decision to treat typing a comment and selecting "share feedback" so differently.
Dec 12, 2021 at 15:45 answer added EJoshuaS - Stand with Ukraine timeline score: 13
Dec 12, 2021 at 15:09 comment added Tom The second case is similar to this report: Failed first question review audit after choosing sharing feedback? ... sharing feedback is "not allowed" on "known good posts". Pretty bad design decision, but this is how the system currently works.
Dec 12, 2021 at 14:05 history edited Chris CC BY-SA 4.0
Tweak "again" since it gives the wrong impression if folks don't follow the link
Dec 12, 2021 at 13:43 history asked Chris CC BY-SA 4.0