This has been asked at least twice before:
Minor edits to old questions should not cause them to show up in "interesting" list
Should VERY MINOR edits, NOT be bumped to the top?
One was down-voted out of sight, and the other had no satisfactory answer. So, I think the time is right to ask this again, and hopefully get some better responses.
There has recently been a lively discussion about a ban triggered by approving a minor edit.
I approved an edit adding backticks and fixing a typo - was that so bad as to deserve a review ban?
It is currently the case that minor edits should be declined because the value they provide is outweighed by the cost of having them bumped to the front page.
it is the responsibility of editors and reviewers to make a note of how old a post is.
-- Yvette Colomb
This is widely known, and accepted, and is (as far as I'm aware) undisputedly the case right now.
However, it seems to me that bumping the post isn't actually a required part of the editing process. It can be a useful thing to do to an edited post, if it will benefit from getting "another chance" at the front page. But removing the bumping wouldn't prevent edits, nor would it impact their quality in a direct way.
If the problem is that the edit will cause the post to get bumped, then isn't a "better" solution to make a way to approve edits without bumping the post? i.e. It shouldn't be "don't approve minor edits" but rather "don't bump minor edits"?
-- AndyJ
That way we get the same bumping behaviour as now i.e. irrelevant edits aren't bumped. But we also get the value that minor edits bring.
Others seem to share this point of view as well.
if SO is a knowledge repository, does the age of a post really matter though, if it's still useful? Isn't it more important to maintain all the hard work people put in over the years than it is to clutter the front page for a couple of seconds? (Though I'd rather posts not get bumped automatically at all for edits in most cases, I'd rather err on the side of "let's fix content" than "let's not distract answerers for a couple seconds")
-- jrh
Is there maybe a technical issue here that isn't visible from the outside?