One of my questions was edited with the message "change text" and the edit got approved. However, I'm failing to see why, and how this edit is useful. Can someone please tell me if this makes the question better or something?
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4It's borderline useful. I'm not sure I would have approved it. There's a lot of posts that really do need editing, yours didn't. – user3956566 May 26 '18 at 18:26
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35The first two extra line breaks are pointless. I would have rejected it. – duplode May 26 '18 at 19:37
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10As the author of the post, you have the ability to override the approval of the edit and reject the suggested edit. While it's already been rolled back to the version you wrote, another time, you should be able to just reject/revert the suggested edit yourself, if you feel it's not constructive. – Makyen♦ May 27 '18 at 5:23
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5"xxx has approved 427 edit suggestions and rejected 38 edit suggestions" is usually a certain indication that they are a robo reviewer, if not for the 109 manual edits they've done. Still this accept ratio is way too high given the average quality of suggested edits. – Lundin May 28 '18 at 8:26
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From my previous knowledge about approvals/rejections by edits suggested by myself, it's pretty borderline. But if I have had to review it, I'd have rejected it. – Filnor May 28 '18 at 8:40
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No, it wasn't useful in the slightest. I would've rejected that edit stating the reason as either
- making no improvement whatesoever, or
- being harmful, actually hindering readability by breaking those sentences as it has done.
If you notice this repeatedly from this user or the reviewers who approved that edit, I'd recommend flagging for moderator attention.