As a relatively new user on SO I still have a lowly station among the more established users, as is evidenced by my measly sub-1,000 rep. Not exactly being a repwhore, I do enjoy my increasing abilities in this community and so I happily answer, vote, comment and... edit other people's questions.
I accept that there is a peer-review process to weed out the chaff and thanks to the combined selfless efforts of the established residents that is also typically a rather quick process. What I do not understand, however, is that my substantive edits are not mine anymore after the peer-review makes minor changes.
As happened in one of my edits recently, the peer-reviewer made some minor English grammar corrections that I had not cared about to edit, the post was perfectly readable the way I left it. Following the initial discussion following this here meta post, I decided to make some further edits, all English-language stuff and nothing related to substance. And voila!, the edit is mine again and +2 rep to boot (another 600 or so edits and I can peer-review myself!).
I would strongly suggest to change the peer-review process to give the credit to the original editor when there were substantive edits. Seeing my edits appear under a different name certainly is no incentive to keep on improving questions. I suggest to always attribute edits to the editor and have the peer-reviewer do a separate edit of the post if the observed residual buh-buh is too gross for this community to digest. Or have the peer-reviewer decide on whether the edits were substantive (attribute it to the editor) or merely linguistic improvements (do not even bother to mention that in the post - this is not a school for English for Computer engineers).