From what I have been able to find on how suggested edits work, users get a 7 day ban from editing privileges when their rejected edits the last 7 days considerably outweigh their approved edits:
rejectedLast7Days - (approvedLast7Days / 3) >= 5
Which means that users can submit 5 bad edits every week without any approved. This might fit most users, but some users are simply incredibly bad at suggesting edits, and they should in my opinion not be allowed to suggest 5 bad edits before being banned. For example, this simple query shows that some users have as many as 20 15 rejected edits without a single one approved.
Therefore, I suggest that the total approved/rejected ratio for a user is taken into account when deciding how many rejected edits are allowed before a ban:
percentageApproved = approvedTotal / (rejectedTotal + approvedTotal)
rejectedLast7Days - (approvedLast7Days / 3) >= (4 * percentageApproved) + 1
Examples:
- User 1999182 has 15 rejected and 0 accepted edits. 1 rejected edit
without any approved would lead to a ban (
4 * (0/15) + 1 = 1 <= 1
). - User 538613 has 76 rejected and 37 accepted edits. 2 rejected edits without any approved would lead to a ban (
4 * (37/113) + 1 = 1.3 <= 2
). - User 2801037 has 5 rejected and 131 accepted edits. As now, 5 rejected edits without any approved would lead to a ban (
4 * (5/136) + 1 = 4.85 <= 5
).