Earlier today I stumbled upon this edit suggestion, which seeks to remove outdated information from an accepted answer, but with a justification that I had never heard before:
the "does not have support" was confusing customers.
My initial instinct was to reject this edit because it removed a substantial portion of a small answer, and the content it removed was already marked as outdated by the author.
The comment on the suggestion, however, gave me pause. Curious as to who "customers" referred to, I decided to Google the name of the editor. According to LinkedIn, they're not only a Microsoft employee, but the Principal Program Manager for Azure Search, the product at the center of the question whose answer they edited.
After some deliberation, I decided to approve the edit, reasoning that if anyone was qualified to say that an answer was confusing to Azure Search customers, it would be an employee of the company who works with them daily.
Looking back on this, though, I'm not sure I made the right call.
After I approved the edit, I went to the question page and found that the editor had posted their own, new answer just a few minutes before they proposed the edit. Had I known this when I was reviewing, I probably would have rejected their edit and let their answer naturally overtake the old one. But then that begs the question: does the fault lie with me for approving the edit without knowing that they'd posted an alternative answer?
I read through Meta questions including Is it OK to edit answers to show that they are obsolete, out-of-date, and deprecated? and Good question, old version-dependent answer for guidance, but I don't think either of them fully addresses this specific situation.
As I see it, this question is essentially about whether an editor's professional background gives them more credibility when proposing an edit. The two positions that I'm stuck between are:
- Approve - The editor's knowledge as an Azure Search employee makes them uniquely qualified to suggest this edit.
- Reject - The information should have been kept and the edit rejected, no matter who the editor was.
I'm very new to the Suggested Edits queue and I'm eager to learn. Did I make the right decision here?