Yes, the mass edits are considered abusive to the reviewers. Firstly, I would like to point to you that every reviewer only deals with at most 20 tasks every day (when the queue < 1k items, which it is), so when you put everyone through lots of your edits, the pool of robo-reviewers will be cleared, which is not good for massive retagging. Plus, you're doing it on weekends -> Even fewer robo reviewers -> robo reviewer pool drains up even more quickly. I learned this in the past where I also did massive edit batches.
Ahem.
In addition to the discussion you found, there's also this in "the robo-reviewers' room":
This user's edits (links to your activity tab) are vandalism, promoting project euler.
Which is a clear signal that you raised someone's attention through what you've done and they decided to alert the reviewers through their robo-reviewers' room. Now, I would like to also share with you how your edits could be rejected:
1. Outstanding Potential Improvement
So I've went through and looked at your last four suggested edits as of yet. To comment (blue pen marks my comments):
I think that even small edits are useful and are improving SO site.
Having used up your pool of robo-reviewers by the first few dozens edits, the reviewers left are those who actually rejects. Having said that, your minor edits will of course fall short on luck and gets rejected.
2. Absolutely the worst edit comment
added tag and link
is about as poor as:
improved formatting
... Which most editors also use, however these should reflect your intent of editing and be convincing about getting it approved. When I was still suggesting edits, an edit comment of mine would look like this:
Improved grammar, edited example layout to improve readability. Fixes title.
<lol
Embed the pictures and improves grammar.
<lol
Format numbered list for options.
<lol
Formatted second code block with lang-none as it's not code. Indent code properly (another code formatting edit 1/5) and improved clarity and grammar.
These are all consecutive and arbitrarily-randomly chosen edits from the currently 7th page of my Suggestions tab.
3. Digging through old posts
I'm short on time, so I'll make this short. Your editing spree covered old posts. There are no official guidelines on whether this is acceptable or preferred (as in editing old posts), however when you do the same repetitive edits on a lot of old posts at least it will ring a red alarm for the reviewers.
###Addressing your confusion:
I didn't do it to promote Project Euler site. Simply there were so many not tagged and linked Project Euler questions and only few not tagger 4Clojure question.
cleanup-request
Few months ago I was solving problems from these two sites and found them interesting.
That's... irrelevant, there's no questioning of whether the sites are good, just that your edits makes up for good rejecting targets.
I think that my yesterday's edits were useful work. This work is not worth 200 rep points but doing edit there is no option 'I don't want rep points for this' (maybe it should be)
Users with full editing privileges are supposed to do with the minor edits. If you're suggesting edits, you have to make it count. Read also: Peer review edits use of "This edit is incorrect or an attempt to reply to or comment on the existing post." - accuracy?
I don't plan another such experiment.
Good.
If there is [project-euler] tag (I didn't invented it) then questions regarding Euler problems should be tagged with this tag.
retag-request
A lot of questions regarding [project-euler] has been mistagged, I would like to...
<lol
I think that even small edits are useful and are improving SO site.
Yes, but you're not going to get your edits approved, simply because there's no pressing need to add 100 links to 100 posts (barely an improvement), which bumps those 100 questions and requires at least three reviewers' review for each of your edits. In conclusion, this turns out to be a waste of everyone's time. If you really want to help clean up bad questions, post a meta thread first (tagged appropriately of course), and follow the editing guidelines.