Several of my favorite questions got edited by the same user in last 24 hours and I noticed that
- the edits made no visible changes,
- their summaries talk about hundreds of added characters,
- they did not go through suggested edits review* and
- some of them have been rollbacked.
* The user has rep 1 just temporarily, due to suspension. Actually, their reputation is well over 4k.
Under closer inspection, I found they added long runs of soft hyphen characters. So just invisible mess.
The user is suspended now, according to the message at the top of their profile:
This account is temporarily suspended for rule violations. The suspension period ends in 3 days.
As I already mentioned, some of these edits have been rollbacked:
- Why is it faster to process a sorted array than an unsorted array? – revision 43
- How does the SQL injection from the “Bobby Tables” XKCD comic work? – revision 14
Still, some of these harmful edits have not been rollbacked.
- What is the strict aliasing rule? – revision 7
- Can you provide some examples of why it is hard to parse XML and HTML with a regex? – revision 3
- What methods of ‘clearfix’ can I use? – revision 6
- … and probably many others.
How should I handle this (and similar cases in the future)? Is there an established protocol to cleanup the effects of harmful actions that lead to suspensions?
I guess a moderator must have suspended the user, so custom flag seems misplaced here as a mod has already been involved.
Sifting through the user’s revisions log an rollbacking manually is labor-intensive, but it seems to be the way to go here. Am I right? I would be OK with that, had it not been just accidentally that I noticed the pattern in the user’s behavior, which had already been partially handled by the suspension. I think someone should have already done this or brought it up on meta to get help with that.
Letting the edits slip through does not feel right. But is that the default approach once a suspension is imposed? After all, these edits will probably be rollbacked, eventually, unless in a very low-profile question.