Today I checked on a tag that I created a while ago, and I noticed an odd error in the tag description that I didn't remember making. When I inspected the history, I found this: https://stackoverflow.com/posts/55172085/revisions
Using another edit, this user also incorrectly removed some punctuation from the tag wiki itself. This seemed a bit odd, and wanting to give them the benefit of the doubt, I took a look at their edit history, which revealed this pattern:
They were clearly gaming the system to achieve the "Research Assistant" badge (they achieved the badge the very next day), but most of these edits negatively affected the tag wikis involved. Is there a better way to prevent this behaviour? They are a trusted user (20k+ rep), and so they can make tag wiki edits with practically no oversight.
I've read other posts on meta, such as this and this, and the standard methods for dealing with faulty edits do not really apply to tag wikis.
- It is not possible to roll back or reject edits, even as the tag's creator.
- Tag wikis and excerpts do not have comments, so I cannot notify the editor directly.
- Likewise, tag wikis and excerpts are not posts, and so they cannot be flagged for moderator attention.
My only option seems to be to submit additional edits to elicit a rollback, and wait for them to get approved. This certainly works, but I can't help but feel that a better solution is possible.
One idea is to notify the most recent editor of a tag wiki if a new edit is approved, so that faulty edits could be undone more quickly. I don't think this would require too many changes to the existing infrastructure, and the hope is that this wouldn't result in too many notifications for users (tag wiki editors are rare).