TL;DNR
- The actions taken in this incident punish good-faith efforts by reviewers who don't have full moderator privileges
- It is not clear that punishing reviewers this way also discourages poor answers
- It is not clear that punishing reviewers this way also discourages edits to poor answers
- It is not clear (to someone at this privilege level, i.e. me) that punishing reviewers this way saves anyone's time, either reviewers or diamond moderators, if it does not by itself discourage low-quality behaviors.
- The review interface leads users (i.e. me) to draw several conclusions about what is expected of them, that are basically opposite to what some of the super-mods have been saying in their answers here. That is a problem.
Analysis
Looking at this in terms of reward and punishment, let's analyze what exactly has happened.
- A new user ("Poster") with 1 reputation provided a poor answer to a question.
- A user ("Editor") with (apparently) over 1000 reputation made an (apparently) good-faith edit to the poor answer.
- You ("Reviewer") decided to approve the edit in good faith in the review console.
- A Moderator temporarily banned you from doing reviews as a result.
- I cannot tell what if any action Moderator took against Editor.
- The answer is now gone, so at some point the answer itself was deleted. I cannot tell by whom.
So given this information, what behaviors have been incentivized? I cannot find any.
- Contributing poor answers? It seems not, as the answer has now been deleted. I believe that would reverse any reputation awards from upvoting that had occurred in the meantime.
- Making poor edits? Mixed message at best. Initially the edit was approved, but now the entire answer has been deleted.
But what behaviors have been disincentivized?
- Poor review choices. This is plainly true, due to the existence of this question on meta.
- Contributing poor answers. The answer is deleted.
- Making poor edits. The answer is deleted.
- And of course, if doing something poorly is punished, the activity itself now carries risk, and requires care, and therefore takes more time than it might otherwise. Posting, editing, and reviewing.
And now, how do these incentives and disincentives change if Moderator had not temporarily banned Reviewer?
- Plainly, the disincentive on poor review choices goes away; therefore review activity is less risky and takes less time. I assume that the approval would be deducted from the count towards any badge when the answer itself was deleted, so this would become a neutral activity, not rewarded or punished.
- Poor answers? I don't see how, if the answer is deleted anyway.
- Poor edits? I don't see how, if the answer is deleted anyway.
If all this reasoning is valid, we may conclude that the punishment of Reviewer was counter-productive from a viewpoint of reward and punishment - assuming, of course, that people doing reviews is desirable.
Now let's consider whose time was saved and wasted in this temporary review ban.
- Moderator spent time doing the ban, that would not have been spent not imposing a ban.
- Is Moderator time otherwise unaffected? Do edited answers take longer to delete than unedited ones?
- Reviewer's time was saved during the ban - because Reviewer is not doing any reviews.
- Poster's time is unaffected - the edit is still approved, and the answer still deleted, whether or not the ban is imposed.
- Editor's time is unaffected - the edit is still approved, and the answer still deleted, whether or not the ban is imposed.
I see only one way in which the punishment of Reviewer is beneficial from a viewpoint of time management: if it saves significant moderator time to delete poor answers when they have never been edited. Otherwise, I find it is also counter-productive from a viewpoint of time management to punish reviewers this way.
I cannot help but notice that in the answers and discussion so far, users with full Trusted User privilege are nearly all in favor of your temporary ban, and users who have not yet earned the Access To Moderator Tools privilege (10k rep) are nearly all opposed to it. (Including me.) I find this conspicuous. It points to the 10K reputation level being some sort of threshold where the reward/punishment balance changes from one side to the other.
So I conclude, the temporary ban from the review panel resulting from a poor review decision is either an unambiguously bad policy, or at best a trade-off where moderator time is saved at the expense of disincentivizing reviewers.
Review Interface
While I don't see the interface as the crux of what should be done about such review decisions, I do agree with others that the review interface could be better designed. The UI implies that the reviewer should consider the edit in a vacuum, without respect to attached comments or the antecedent question, and consider only the actions presented as buttons at the top of the page.
- If the correct behavior in the above case is to flag the answer, why isn't "Reject and Flag" one of the buttons? This is so bleeding obvious.
- If the edit should be considered in the context of the original question, show the question. Screen real estate is a concern, but the question could be added below. These users have lots of rep, so they're sophisticated, and anyway this is not the same screen; so I think it's OK to invert the presentation.
- It is not even clear whether the score we are shown is the score of the question or the answer in this case. Especially if "the question matters", both scores should be shown.