Consider the following scenario:
- A user comes across an item on the site, say an answer, that is obvious junk and should be nuked
- As a a result, said user flags the item with a flag that causes it to be pushed into a review queue
- The users in that queue "review" the item and mark it as okay, disputing the flag
- The user who flagged the item sees their flag is disputed, and knowing that (once again) the review system has failed, raises a moderator flag on the same item instead
- A mod reviews that flag, agrees with the flagger, and banishes the trash
What, if anything, happens to the users who incorrectly reviewed the original flag?
I'm asking this not out of spite (okay, maybe a bit of spite, because seriously robo-reviewers need to die) but because this whole process is horribly inefficient and time-wasting:
- It wastes the flagger's time because they have to flag the item once, watch their flags history to see if their flag was wrongly disputed, then raise another mod flag with a nice description of why that flag should actually have been upheld
- It wastes the time of the good reviewers who upheld the original flag, but were overridden by the bad reviewers who disputed it
- It wastes the time of a moderator because they have to manually process a flag that really should have been handled by the review system
In other words, everyone who was trying to do the right thing gets their time wasted - that doesn't seem fair to me. To cut down on this waste, users who flag would be tempted to simply flag everything with a mod flag, bypassing the review queues completely and potentially adding unnecessary work for the mods, both of which are problematic.
I'm wondering if there is any system (automated or manual) in place to identify this sort of pattern and find users who repeatedly, incorrectly approve flagged items, that are later upheld by moderators? And if there is, are any penalties (i.e. review bans) levied against these repeat offenders?