I think that there are some questions in which the best possible answer is a concise one.
So when I came to this review, after hesitating a bit (I often skip these traps), I decided to accept it because:
- The question seemed to call for a short answer
- This answer provided a command apparently suitable for the issue presented in the question (it wasn't up to me deciding if the answer was technically valid)
... but it was a trap.
Why I think this failure has to be disputed? Because the actual reason why this answer was marked as a low quality one is that the guy who answered wrote a short answer copying some others well upvoted answers.
But how could I know it? Shouldn't the reviewer only judge the answer itself? The audit didn't provide all the information to mark that answer as a low quality one, and for this reason it should be removed from the audit list.
I strongly believe that any test (let's think for example to University exams) should be standalone. An exam that can be passed only looking at the solution is not a true exam, and that's the case. An audit that can be passed only detecting it is an audit.
This ban is really painful, because it comes after a very long list of consecutive passed audits (I don't know how many: 20?), but since it isn't my first ban they seem to not give me any credit from the banning system perspective. And since ban periods double each time it's going to be an unfair punishment for what I judge a dishonest audit.