Answers to Is it allowed to bump a question by doing an unnecessary edit? simply state that reasonable people should not be doing that. But I am just curious about if there is anything ever been done to actually discourage those who decide to ignore the guidelines?
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There was, but it was removed because people kept complaining about it.– ServyJan 11, 2017 at 20:10
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According to The Complete Rate-Limiting Guide, one can only make 5 edits on one's own posts per day, more for high-rep users. The number might be different on SO.– S.L. Barth is on codidact.comJan 11, 2017 at 20:20
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1It only takes an edit every other day or so to stay on the front page in the tags where this behavior annoys me the most.– Alex P.Jan 11, 2017 at 20:49
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9If someone is abusing it (like has a page of trivial edits), flag it as Other and let the mods know what's up with that user.– user1228Jan 11, 2017 at 20:54
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6@Servy Because it was stupid - after ten edits the answer would auto-convert to community wiki and you'd lose all the rep for the answer. It was a massive disincentive to both continuous improvement of answers and keeping older answers up to date.– J...Jan 12, 2017 at 2:40
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2@J... You don't lose rep when an answer is converted to CW, you just stop getting rep from new votes, and the answers that actually got meaningful and significant edits enough times to actually trigger it were vanishingly small, to the point that managing those cases manually was not a problem at all.– ServyJan 12, 2017 at 14:12
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@S.L. Barth: That's different. This question is about multiple edits to the same post over an indefinite period of time.– BoltClockJan 13, 2017 at 5:10
1 Answer
If someone makes beyond a certain number of edits on one of their posts, moderators receive an automatic flag from the system. If we determine that these edits are being used to "bump" a post, we have a template message that we can send to warn people to stop doing this.
If the edits continue after that warning, or they've been warned before, we can lock the post and / or suspend the user to stop this.
It used to be that too many edits triggered an automatic wiki conversion, but that had too many side-effects and didn't resolve the problem, so this was changed. Since that change, there haven't been too many cases where we've needed to step in, and even fewer where a gentle warning didn't stop someone from doing this.
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2Are these edit thresholds time-sensitive? E.g. is there a difference to the system whether it is being edited several times in one day or once every so often?– TylerHJan 11, 2017 at 22:43
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3@TylerH - I don't believe so. If I remember correctly, the flag is triggered once X number of edits have accumulated by the author on a post. Don't remember what X is, either, since the flags we see from this aren't all that frequent.– Brad Larson ModJan 11, 2017 at 22:57
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Cool, thanks. I have a particular post I have updated quite a bit with new info/dates since 2015 I was thinking of, but most of those edits have been substantive. I will try to hold off on editing that one unless necessary.– TylerHJan 11, 2017 at 23:53
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2@TylerH: Why? If they are good edits, then edit. It's better to have posts that are updated. I think the moderators can handle an unnecessary flag once in a while. Jan 12, 2017 at 10:36
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Is this policy still in place? I've seen a user make 30 edits to their question in a few hours, and they don't seem to have been blocked from more edits yet. Feb 16, 2021 at 4:15