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I'm just wondering whether the person who suggested an edit would lose 2 reputation if the edit he/she suggested is rolled back.

Why do we give rep to users who suggested an edit that gets approved? Because this is contribution, right? The user contributed by improving an answer/question. We give rep to him/her because we want to encourage them to contribute.

So if the edit is rolled back, there is no contribution any more, because whoever rolled back that edit thinks the edit is not good. I guess it would make sense to take rep off of the suggester.

Is this true? If it is not, can we implement such a feature?

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    What behaviour would that change and why would we want to change it? Jun 12, 2016 at 11:07
  • You're not targeting the right issue for me - why was this hypothetical edit (that was so bad it needed to be rolled back) approved in the first place?
    – Tunaki
    Jun 12, 2016 at 15:15
  • They get a badge. It's called Cleanup. Jun 12, 2016 at 17:37

1 Answer 1

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No such mechanic exists. See this question on MSE and its responses. As Tunaki has pointed out, and the top answer there states, bad edits getting approved is just a symptom of a larger problem: edits being reviewed by people who shouldn't even be reviewing in the first place.

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