I recently suggested an edit, only to find it rejected later on. Still I think it was an improvement to:
- spell “Visual Basic” instead of a lower-case abbreviation (“vb”)
- use a typographic dash and apostrophe (
-
to—
and'
to’
) - remove quote markup, use bold emphasis on the actual question instead
The other two reviewers obviously thought the same way, approving the suggestion. The third reviewer (the OP) however, rejected it by choosing:
This edit does not make the post even a little bit easier to read, easier to find, more accurate or more accessible. Changes are either completely superfluous or actively harm readability.
Allegedly, this decision was not based on factual grounds. I don’t want to imply the OP didn’t want his or her text to be tampered with, but I have no better guess, so I wonder:
Why are low-reputation, newly registered users able to reject edit suggestions? After all, that’s a delicate privilege. You need to earn 500 reputation to access any review queue, and even 2000 reputation to review suggested edits.
Can an OP (how?) always vote on suggestions for his/her question, regardless of experience, and does an OP’s veto thus outweigh two supporting votes?
If this is intentional, isn’t it undermining the concept of peer-review (through third parties) and the emphasis on community-edit above original authorship?