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Although it isn't a huge addition I do believe my initial proposal (seen here) added useful clarification to the topic.

It was later rejected with the response: Contains factually incorrect information. == is called the equality operator.

Feeling pretty crazy at the time I decided to modify my justifications slightly and submit the request one more time in the hopes that maybe I'd get a different reviewer.

But alas it was not meant to be, this time the rejection response (from the same user) was: Very poor addition and incorrect.

So I moved on, like I said, it wasn't a huge addition by any means.

Then today I hop on SO to see that this change was later approved by the exact same person that had twice rejected my change request with virtually the exact same contents.

What have I gathered from this small chain of events? We need more than 1 reviewer for documentation changes. I'm sure plenty of others have already experienced a similar situation and it's not likely to change in the current format. What do you guys think, am I way off-base here or is this a legitimate concern?

The same concern is voiced here but without a clear example of the type of tomfoolery that is likely to continue if the current system remains in place.

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  • Well one thing the other edit has that yours doesn't it is actually says which one is which. Commented Jul 22, 2016 at 13:30
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    Similar thing happend to me meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/328968/… Commented Jul 22, 2016 at 13:50
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    Maybe a 4 votes approval with weight from the SO tag, gold badges in tag worth 4 votes (approve or reject immediately), silver worth 3, bronze worth 2 and no badge worth 1, this could smooth the review while ensuring there's a knowledgeable peer reviewing. Maybe prevent two review in a row of same topic change by same author from same reviewer too to avoid this kind of rejection and enforcing others reviewer for thes econd proposal ?
    – Tensibai
    Commented Jul 22, 2016 at 14:45
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    @Tensibai I agree, I was thinking of a very similar approach - where higher rep or higher tag-count users' votes carried more weight in the approval process. This would definitely be an improvement to the current process.
    – bwegs
    Commented Jul 22, 2016 at 14:58
  • More complex, but perhaps better, would be to tie the "worth 4 votes" to the user's rep in the tags associated with the item.
    – Rick James
    Commented Aug 19, 2016 at 3:27

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