From the help center page on the editing privilege:
Tiny, trivial edits are discouraged - try to make the post significantly better when you edit, correcting all problems that you observe.
https://stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/edit
Under normal circumstances, this doesn't warrant you going out of your way to intervene; however, edits bump questions on the active page, and a large number of these edits will fill the active tab with old questions and annoy the regulars of the associated tags.
This becomes especially egregious when the user has less than 2,000 reputation points (they do not have the editing privilege), because it can take up to five users each spending one of their twenty review votes for the day to approve or reject each edit.
If you feel that the situation warrants intervention, and you want to take it upon yourself to do so, you could either:
- choose "Reject and Edit" for each one that you find, this automatically commits the rejection and overwrites it with your edit. The downside of this is that it takes a lot more time to fix one of these edits than to make five more; or,
- invite the user to a new chatroom and explain why editing (or submitting edits to) large numbers of inactive posts is problematic. Let them know that we don't discourage editing in general, but edits should be thorough and meaningful. There is no reason to edit a zero score question from five years ago that no one cares about.
If you feel that the situation warrants an intervention, but you don't want to take it upon yourself to do so (for whatever reason), you could either:
- bring it to the attention of other users in chat (for example the SOCVR room); or,
- use a custom moderator flag on one of the edited posts. Describe (in detail) the edits that are being made which you feel are unnecessary and problematic, and link to some of the relevant edits.
Moderators can and will decline these flags if they disagree with you; make sure it is not border-line.
Related: