In the review queues, include explanation about what happens when you fail an audit. I found this answer - if it is accurate, please include it into the review page itself: Got review banned for one failed audit; I acted on the post but not in the way that it would expect
After failing a (bad) audit, I was very upset, since I didn't know what would happen if I failed another: Lose all my reputation? Get banned from the entire site?
Besides, include the necessary stats to estimate the "danger" of getting banned:
- Number of failed audits within the last 30 days
- Duration of the (possible) ban
EDIT after Marco Bonelli's answer:
Three arguments against that:
- I think, Stack Overflow should be transparent, i.e. not hiding what's happening behind the scenes.
- As I reported earlier today, the Triage isn't explained on the corresponding privilege page: Bug: Triage not explained in “Access Review Queues” privilege How can I be sure that it had not just been forgotten on that reputation page too?
- If (as you say) the information is available anyway, why hide it somewhere in the help section, instead of answering it right away?
My ultimate argument is: If you don't trust me, you shouldn't give me the review privilege in the first place. What's the point of the entire reputation system if you think that people do their work thoroughly, only because they fear an uncertain consequence?
Compromise: give clear information that failing audits doesn't cost you reputation and failing repeatedly will cause a temporary ban from reviewing. That's certainly better than nothing.
EDIT after more discussion and downvotes:
All I'm suggesting is to make the system more transparent and usable by proactively revealing an information which is publicly available anyway (namely how the banning system works exactly).
Using a sheet of paper and a pencil in front of their computer, any of those "bad guys" (or robot) you are fearing about can easily keep track of their personal statistics and the "banning-danger" themselves anyway. So what's the point in hiding this from the "good guys" too?