No, this is not a duplicate. The original post below acknowledges the other question and differentiates it from this one. The irony here is that this could now end up as an audit question to make sure people are paying attention.
Original Post:
When reviewing closed questions, there are occasional "audit" questions that are supposed to make sure you're paying attention. The problem with these is that sometimes you can "fail" these audits, not because you weren't paying attention, but because you disagree with how the audited question was originally moderated.
What if there a way to flag an audit question besides creating a meta question?
Right now the review process requires you to click an "I Understand" button. Suppose there also was "I Disagree" button? So far, this is similar to this other proposal, but what if you had to support your position by writing some text before you could move on?
The tone of the UI when you "fail" an audit is extremely off-putting, and makes me far less likely to participate in the review process. Being told to slow down and pay attention--after you've studied the question for a few minutes, reviewed the comments, and looked up terminology because the question is outside a domain you know--is borderline abusive.
I refuse to click "I Understand" in these cases, and generally go upvote the question, vote to re-open it, and add a comment explaining why I think the closing was unfair. It seems it would be far more productive to flag the question and dubious for audits and encourage the reviewer to review more questions.
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