Apparently I missed out on quite a few developments regarding the stance towards partial edits. Looking at it now I largely agree with my flag being declined, because a.) the flag didn't contain any links to problematic reviews, and b.) the edits I thought of as "problematic" are not actually problematic, given the current stance towards those edits.
Christmas came early for me this year. In this case, it was in form of a declined flag. This happens from time to time, and - as most of us are humans - that's perfectly fine. Sometimes the user that issued the flag misinterpreted something, sometimes the moderator handling the flag didn't look close enough, so I generally don't care that much (even though it ruins my statistics!!!).
Here's the custom flag (including freehand-drawn red circles):
However, in this case, it's a blatant robo-reviewer, and blatant means blatant.
Just take a look these reviews, and then tell me again that this flag was worthy of being declined.
Reject: Edit to show the picture
Approve: Edit to remove noise, left 50% of the initial noise untouched
Approve: Changed the original intent
Approve: Moved one line of code
If someone feels the need to dig deeper, go ahead.
The question that I now have is - as already stated in the title - why that flag was declined, for waffles sake. Am I missing out on something? Are changes to code - as shown in the reviews above - now suddenly okay?
This flag was one of two that I issued at basically the same time. Both also happened to contain basically the same text, the only difference being that the other one was marked as "Helpful". Also, both flags were handled by the same moderator, which only adds to my confusion.
What I did not do in either case was adding links to problematic reviews. I didn't think about that, and I should have done that. Still, that shouldn't be a reason to decline a mod flag (IMO).