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Note: I am not including a link because the purpose of this post is not to call anybody out.

I recently edited a question. The user had misspelled the word "within" in the post's title. I looked at the pending review, to find out one of the reviewers rejected the edit:

This edit does not make the post even a little bit easier to read, easier to find, more accurate or more accessible. Changes are either completely superfluous or actively harm readability.

Two other reviewers have approved the edit. When looking at the stats on the reviewer who rejected the edit:

[Reviewer] has approved 378 edit suggestions and rejected 510 edit suggestions and improved 5 edit suggestions

I have not checked the exact statistics for edit approvals, but this user's reject percentage seems several standard deviations above the average. And with a pretty large sample size at that.

In this case, it the review process will succeed because of the fact that the other reviewers approved the edit, overriding the reject. But this would not always be the case.

What type of measures are in place to make sure the review permission is not being abused? If a user rejects enough edits that other users approve, will he or she get flagged for serial edit rejection?

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    I wouldn't doubt that that user's rejections are above average, but that's because the vast majority of reviewers approve content that they shouldn't. It's hard enough to get obvious spam/vandalism rejected, let alone just bad/inappropriate edits.
    – Servy
    Sep 2, 2016 at 20:17
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    Maybe the reviewer misvoted because a cat bumped into their arm when they were clicking the vote button? (No, really! I did misvote once because one of my cats bumped into my arm when I was clicking to vote and I ended up clicking the wrong button.)
    – Louis
    Sep 2, 2016 at 20:31
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    @Louis That should be an answer, not a comment. Sep 2, 2016 at 20:31
  • Gothdo (user who edited this question's title) clearly did not understand/appreciate the comic pun ;) Sep 2, 2016 at 20:33
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    Side note: Single word changes are rarely worth time of 4-5 people it takes to get it approved so rejecting such change is fair (preferably reject and edit). Better example would help to build a case (and 800 reviews is not large number... maybe that person only acts on questionable reviews found organically monitoring questions instead of seating in edit queue) Sep 2, 2016 at 22:59
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    The typical bad reviewer on Stack Overflow has too many approve votes, not reject.
    – Pekka
    Sep 3, 2016 at 7:16
  • @Servy I have been looking through some revision histories and you are absolutely right. Sep 6, 2016 at 16:31

1 Answer 1

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There's an automated system to block bad reviewers (often called robo-reviewers)—review audits. If someone fails too many of them, they will get automatically suspended from reviewing for some period of time.

Moderators can also manually suspend users from reviewing. If you think that some post was reviewed incorrectly, you can flag it for moderator intervention and explain the situation, or you can post a question on Meta about it.

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