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In documentation, it is not acceptable to have wrong information, and when a user suggests an example or an edit to a specific post, there is no guarantee that his suggestions are true even programmatically. As the reviewer also is a regular user without any restrictions, there is not a guarantee that this user will know that the suggestions have mistakes and hence he/she can approve mistakes unknowingly.

So, why aren't there some restrictions about the user who can review and accept these suggestions, like having a badge in the corresponding topic, or having a high enough reputation to review these posts.

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There are. Documentation edits require 4 approval or rejection votes by users with at least 100 reputation before they go live or are removed, respectively.

There are also some increased powers given to users who are shown to be subject-matter experts:

  • Users with a silver or gold tag badge (from Q&A) will skip review when they make an edit to that tag's documentation
    • This include aliases, so a sql-server-2008-r2 silver badge will work on sql-server's documentation
    • If multiple tags are involved (because of moving examples, or submitting multiple topic changes as one) you must have a badge in each tag to skip review
      • Users with a silver or gold tag badge can one-click approve or reject a proposed change from another user to that tag's documentation
      • Reviews now take 4 "votes" to approve or reject, and how many votes a users approval or rejection counts for is based on their reputation
    • users with >= 10,000 rep get 3 votes
    • users with >= 1,000 rep get 2 votes
    • users with >= 100 rep get 1 vote

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