I recently noticed a series of answers by the same user receiving what I'd call self-sabotage. That is, code was made to subtly fail or be incorrect or the entire meaning of the answer changed (e.g. "X does not include Y" -> "X includes Y" when the former was obviously the case).
In the past (possibly on a Stack Exchange where I had higher rep and more permissions) I recall seeing a "Revert edit" button on the history list. However, I can't see that option anymore, so I have been manually reverting many of these changes. However several of them are only minor changes and Stack Exchange won't let me submit a <6 character edit suggestion.
So, what is the best way to notify a moderator (or anyone with appropriate permissions) of such activity so that they can:
More easily revert all the changes than I can; by submitting edit suggestions I may just be making more work for editors.
Temporarily suspend the user until it's determined what's going on or if it's a hacked account.
Should I just flag the answers with "Other: needs moderator attention"? Is there not some way of flagging the account itself as having suspicious/bad actions?
[Edit: Specific examples removed as per ChrisF's suggestions; the individual answers have been flagged or had suggested edits made. I'd still like to know about the missing "revert" button and when I can only make suggested edits if I'm causing more work than just flagging the answer.]
Another note: there is a difference between a "revert" edit and one made manually (e.g. the resultant history clearly says "Rollback to Revision 2" rather than readers having to verify the edit comment's claim that that's what the change does). This suggests to me that if you don't see a "revert" button/link (I don't), then you're better off flagging the answer instead of manually trying to revert it; at least as far as the resultant history logs are concerned.
rollback
yet, you can still use theedit
buttons in the revision history on the unvandalized version, change nothing in the textarea, fill out the reason and submit. Though it's probably a better idea to flag for moderator attention instead of going with these things to the review queue.