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Just look at this link in a "Documentation Proposed Changes". How can a peer-review approve such changes?

I also went to the profile of this user and saw that he gained around 80 reputation in 2 days, with half of it was similar spam, such as changing the title to uppercase or adding a word or space and so on. And the strange thing is all were approved.

Is this a flaw in system or is this legal?

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If you look at the side-by-side markdown view, you can see he added comments in various code blocks:

enter image description here

If the reviewers were in this mode, they might have thought he was adding some more information about the samples without realising the comments arn't rendered in the actual documentation. Not excusing the behaviour of not fully evaluating an edit, but it could be a reason.

Also, it appears like all of the edits that user has done are for their own posts, for which they don't need approval.

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  • I dont think so. The user had only 100 rep before few days how can these originally be his own posts? Also check this link the last 10 edits he did are all spam and approved. stackoverflow.com/users/2806499/simplans?tab=reputation Commented Nov 7, 2016 at 6:16
  • 1
    @WaqasBukhary ah, I was looking at his post revisions, not documentation. I wouldn't necessarily call capitalisation changes "spam", but they should almost certainly be coupled with something of more substance rather than a word or two. There is one or two edits with reasonable changes, so maybe just over-zealous editing?
    – Steve
    Commented Nov 7, 2016 at 6:19
  • So the question is this acceptable in stack-overflow? Is this legal? Should others also start doing this to gain quick rep? Commented Nov 7, 2016 at 6:21
  • @WaqasBukhary this seems like an issue the Documentation review queues been having since it was launched: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/329572/…
    – Steve
    Commented Nov 7, 2016 at 6:22
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    @WaqasBukhary It's surely legal, since there is no law against adding HTML comments to an open website... Also note: spam is related to advertising. While the edits are useless, irrelevant, and inapproriate they are not spam, since they do not introduce any advertising. Keep this in mind especially when flagging, otherwise your flags will be declined.
    – Bakuriu
    Commented Nov 7, 2016 at 11:33
  • The specific edit was also rolled back shortly after it was approved: stackoverflow.com/documentation/review/changes/108447
    – animuson StaffMod
    Commented Nov 7, 2016 at 13:52

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