I was going back over my review history and found that I had voted contrary to the majority on this edit to the objective-c tag wiki excerpt. Now anybody who has developed iOS apps in any language other than Swift and Objective-C can tell you that the edit is factually wrong, but in addition, it's also irrelevant info to have in the tag excerpt. The edit was approved in the review queue, but then rolled back the next day by Josh Caswell. Good on him - if the story ended here, I wouldn't be posting to meta.
I was curious to see if erroneous edits have been approved for the tag in the past, so I went through the edit history for the objective-c tag excerpt, and I learned that Josh Caswell has rolled back changes on four separate bad edits 1 2 3 4, the second of which did nothing except to introduce incorrect grammar and break references to other tags.
Now if this is happening on this tag, I can only imagine it is happening on other tags as well. I feel like from now on if I reject a bad tag edit, I should bookmark it so I can roll it back on the off chance that it gets accepted.
First of all, is this something that anyone else has noticed happening in other tags? (Or is the objective-c tag somehow a magnet for bad edits and this isn't a problem for other tag wikis?) If so, then how can we help alleviate this problem? I don't want us to all have to "adopt a tag" like Josh Caswell so that we can monitor it and revert bad edits.
Perhaps we could separate the Suggested Edits review queue into Suggested Edits and Suggested Tag Edits, so that users don't review tag edits unless they specifically seek them out (and hopefully have more knowledge of the tag system)? And/or maybe we could restrict tag edit reviews to >10k rep? (Although with >10k there may not be enough volunteers to review tag edits).
Does this look like a problem in need of a solution, or is it okay to just rely on >20k users to roll back bad tag edits when they happen? Looking forward to hearing what you think.