I don't usually wade into the suggested edits queue, but I did so when the orange icon hit 117 today. I noticed a very large number (7 of my 20 reviews) came from a single user who was suggesting single-word spelling fixes while leaving any other problems with the post untouched.
When I first looked, this user had 322 rep. While I was Rejecting-and-Editing posts, robo-reviewers continued to approve edits. An hour later, the same user has 388 rep, with only four total upvotes across 12 questions and answers.
As has been pointed out on meta before, making this kind of trivial edit without addressing other post issues is always frowned upon, because it bumps a large number of posts needlessly. It is worse when done by an under-2000 rep user, because it wastes a lot of reviewers' time. And in this case, it seems to be primarily for the purpose of gaining rep quickly.
While this is clearly undesirable behavior, I'm not sure what I can do to combat it. Rejecting the review is useless, as it means the edits will be approved 3-1 instead of 3-0. Reject-and-edit is effective, but it is time consuming and even then it still bumps the post to the top of the front page - one of the outcomes we'd like to avoid.
Ultimately, one person can only review so many edits in a day. It seems like a moderator flag might be appropriate, but I don't think I can raise one on a suggested edit. Does Stack Overflow have an official way to handle this situation? If not, shouldn't we get one?
@
-pinged.)javascipt
is a valid spelling. e.g. "how to detect minor typing mistakes in vim, like javascipt" If that person corrects the spelling, then it is a flooding mechanism... ;-)