Yesterday I received the Revival badge for this answer. It has been steadily getting upvotes since I posted it four years ago - why should I receive Revival for it at this point in time? The only reason that comes to mind would be if the rules for Revival have recently changed, but I didn't find anything to support that idea ...
It looks like the first eligible answer which happened to score 2 was downvoted 2 days ago, dropping it to 1.
This made your answer the oldest answer with a score of 2 or more.
Technically, you were the second answer to score 2 or more, but the badge script apparently doesn't take into account that there was a prior answer which had already earned Revival, and also awarded the badge to you once your answer met the requirements.
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1Thanks, that explains it. I guess, another option could have been deletion of a previous answer. – takrl Apr 6 '16 at 8:19
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11Oh, I have always interpreted the rule as "You are first to answer, and your score is 2 or more". Apparently it is "Your answer has score 2 or more, and your answer is the first among all such answers" – justhalf Apr 7 '16 at 9:00
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Would be quite difficult to track that as well, without adding a new column to the database table for the question. – AStopher Apr 7 '16 at 9:22
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@justhalf The question isn't revived until one of the late answers has scored 2 or more. A question apparently can be revived more than once, if no late answers presently revive it, so it's not even necessarily the first late answer which has done so. – user4151918 Apr 7 '16 at 10:44
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Does this mean the user who posted the first eligible answer lost their Revival badge? – JAL Apr 7 '16 at 16:40
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6No. Badges aren't revoked unless there was fraud involved in obtaining them. As you can see, they still have it, even though their score no longer meets the requirement. – user4151918 Apr 7 '16 at 17:02
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