Since I've unlocked the suggested edits queue I would say that it is probably my favourite queue to work through and I often look back at edits I've reviewed to see how people agreed with me and so that I learn to review more consistently and more appropriately with how edits should be done, which is why when I saw this edit:
https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/16886272
I was surprised to see that a user with almost 10k rep, approved the edit! (fortunately another user rejected it)
The edit in question simply changes the following piece of code
<?php echo the_author_meta( 'user_nicename' , $author_id ); ?>
into:
<?php the_author_meta( 'user_nicename' , $author_id ); ?>
By itself, this would be alright, however to circumvent the edit minimum the user added the following at the bottom of the post:
(Edited incorrect echo of function that prints data)
Which is extra noise and a blatant abuse of the ability to make edits. This is the second time today that I've seen a similar action, the first time being on this edit:
https://stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/16884762
Where the editor made it possible to see the <div>
tag again to circumvent the minimum length, they added: <!--comment because edition requires al least 6 chars -->
to the beginning of the post. This slipped through reviewers not looking at the markdown and it was accepted!
It's concerning to see that users are attempting to/succeeding in approving these edits, especially as a user which tries hard to stop these edits getting through.
What can we do about this as it certainly seems to be a recurring problem? A possibility would be to implement more intense suggested edit audits, as while they are intended to prevent robo-reviewing, they should be stopping this kind of review?