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See this review

This is the first review of any type I have failed in months, and was actually the result of a misplaced click.

Is it really necessary to ban someone with generally excellent review statistics over one single error?

When I first started reviewing, and when the quality of audits was much worse than it is, I "failed" several per month and never saw a ban. Has that changed?

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    The automated bans are never applied just for a single failure. Rather, audit failures in the past 30 days are taken into account. Commented Mar 9, 2015 at 8:04
  • It is possible for a moderator to give you a manual review ban, but these days that usually involves a custom message. This often happens if they found spam having been approved via a review queue; the moderator will seek out all that approved the spam and give them a band to send a strong signal that they should be paying more attention to keep spam out. Commented Mar 9, 2015 at 8:11
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    I think attempting to delete a good answer is a much more serious thing than not deleting a bad answer :D Commented Mar 9, 2015 at 9:17
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    @AnttiHaapala: More serious, perhaps, but serious enough to warrant review banning on the strength of a single failure? I think not. The audit system isn't reliable enough for that, and frankly I don't see the need for quite such high standards for reviewers; one-off errors are not the problem — low standards are the problem. Specifically standards low enough to simply click the same button repeatedly, which is the problem audits were originally created to solve, but to a lesser extent general patterns of incompetence. Commented Mar 9, 2015 at 10:09

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All failed audits within the past 60 days are examined by the system when determining whether to impose a temporary review ban after an audit is failed, along with other aspects of your review history.

You previously failed this audit: https://stackoverflow.com/review/low-quality-posts/6813374

In both cases, you voted to delete answers that were generally accepted as useful in answering the question.

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    So two failed audits in 60 days causes a ban on ALL reviewing ability? That seems rather harsh. Commented Mar 9, 2015 at 17:12

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