In my opinion, the review audit system is broken and the suspension system is just a tad bit too harsh. If I am correct, and I don't know if there is a cap on suspension days or not, the amount of time someone is suspended for grows exponentially every time they are suspended (i.e. a fifth suspension for a user would result in a 32 day ban). I also think that there are too many audits that are not actually correct (i.e. a bad post that was recieved well counts as a good post in an audit).
Here are my suggestions to fix this:
[1] Moderators or users with high reputation should manually choose audits. If my assumption is correct, there is some kind of algorithm that SO uses to pick audits, and it seems to get audits wrong a lot. If the mods/high-rep users just had the option to set a question as an audit with a correct answer, I think that this problem would go away.
[2] Change the suspension time from being exponential to logarithmic. Everybody makes mistakes, and while I think that this current system is fine for new reviewers, there are veteran reviewers that might fail an audit and get suspended for 64 days if they have been around long enough. If the system used a logarithmic function, mistakes for high-rep users would still be penalized, just in less of a harsh way. A suggested function to use would be ||log_base_2(x)*10||
(|| ||
is a rounding-down function), because the high rep user gets suspended for 25 days, a lot better than 64, and the amounts a user gets suspended for start to get pretty similar as # of suspensions grows larger.
Any thoughts?