We want to have audits that are rarely of this type, where 'failing' simply indicates that you found yourself at odds with the consensus of folks that voted a certain way, and not that you were simply not paying attention. That's a very hard problem to solve, and no matter how smart we make it, there will always be an edge case where this happens.
I've said this many, many times before, but:
- If you were paying attention to what you were doing
- If you took the action that you honestly felt was the appropriate action to take
- And you subsequently 'failed' the audit
... don't worry about it, and just move on from there.. There's no black mark against your record for this happening occasionally, there's positively nothing to worry about and you should never take feedback from a cognition-impaired robot personally.
Audits are primarily designed to catch people that are just trying to speed-click their way to a few badges. While they do have other benefits, such as helping new reviewers get up to speed with our quirks - those are secondary benefits.
As it stands, we've 'bolted' a considerable amount of stuff onto review since it first debuted. I don't think we properly anticipated how much people would attempt to game the system in order to get badges, and that was, quite frankly, a bit disheartening. Consequently, audits were bolted on - and then stuff bolted onto audits, and then stuff bolted onto that.
As we continue diving into the quality project (MSE summary | MSO summary), queues are going to get a lot of fundamental fixing that they've been longing for, which includes smarter audits. Every time you think contention is easy to catch, well, this happens :)
tl;dr
- You weren't doing 180 in a 60 zone; ignore the automatic speeding ticket, but please do appreciate just how many real speeders it catches. And, don't forget - any time you feel strongly that the community made a wrong call, this is the place to go. The fact that it came up in an audit might be interesting, but could detract from the goal of actually getting people to reopen it.