I know this is about the helper queue, but it starts at triage.
We're going to be beefing the 'brain' of the machine that automatically sends things into triage, especially when it comes to posts by very new accounts where we don't have a lot of history to go on, and the ML stuff comes up pretty inconclusive.
This should be putting a better sampling of stuff into triage and hopefully making the distinction between 'Should be improved' and 'Unsalvageable' a little more clear. We looked at what Triage was feeding the helper queue, and this led to us realizing we needed to get better as far as feeding Triage. tl;dr; you shouldn't see as many of these in the coming weeks.
The single biggest source of noise in the queue seems to be posts that lacked important details in order to become answerable, and no edit in the world (unless it brought those details in) would really help the post. We're working on tuning the feedback loops that puts stuff back into the queue if it didn't see any signs of improvement after being in.
We also need to introduce notices for the post owner that their post is undergoing improvement. That's hopefully going out this week.
Short answer:
- "Skip" if the post looks like it could be of decent quality, but you just can't edit it for some reason.
- "Very low quality" if it never belonged in the helper queue in the first place, it's just not worth the effort, and would probably do better just being asked again
- "Edit" for everything else. Or even a comment if you'd like to edit but can't because the post is missing something.
It's a bit confusing until we manage to get everything tuned just right, we apologize for that. Posts do age out of the queue relatively quickly, and the number of times something is skipped is pretty good signal - we just have to see how some changes we're about to make impacts the data before we start adding more levers :)