(Please note - I am not arguing about the outcome of the suspension post linked below; it is only relevant in that it served to shine a light on a process where I observed a potential problem).
The situation over at Overly Severe Review Suspension highlighted (in my opinion) a problematic work flow in the review queue. While reviewing, you are hit with random audits to ensure you are paying attention. Failing an audit is bad, and failing several can get you banned.
Okay, sounds good. However, as the aforementioned thread highlighted, the review ban will kick in immediately when you perform a 'wrong action' on an audit (where failing the audit would result in a ban, obviously); in this case, downvoting a 'known good post' audit immediately got the user review banned, before they even clicked "I'm Done" to submit the audit. I can only assume editing or commenting on a 'known good post' would have triggered the ban as well.
The problem here is that it was (allegedly) a misclick, and the user was not afforded the opportunity to correct that misclick before incurring the wrath of the system. We want users to learn from and correct their mistakes. So much so that when you fail an audit, you have to endure a BIG BOLD MESSAGE telling you that you messed up before you can proceed.
Likewise, when upvoting or downvoting a question or answer on the main site, you are afforded a length time period during which you can change your vote or simply remove it altogether. And the time frame is potentially unlimited, if the post keeps getting edited.
So why does the system ban you prematurely here?
The privilege page for review queues only mentions:
When you take one of these actions, the "I'm Done" button becomes enabled, allowing you to complete the review.
Which indicates that you complete a review when you click the "I'm Done" button. In most cases where you are tested on something, you can go back and change your answer up until you turn your test or exam in to the proctor.
The MSE post on review queues does not mention bans or the audit process at all.
S.L. Barth recalled that it used to be the other way around, but people were complaining about wasting lengthy comments on review items that turned out to be audits, so it was changed. Is that really what happened?