I'm somewhat new to the queue, have passed all my audits up to today, where I just had my first review audit failure. At first glance it seems like "woah, you weren't paying attention" but let me explain my logic:
When this answer comes up for "review", it's presented as a one-line answer, four hours old with a default-avatar username like "user2390983590" or some such string, which throws up flags for me in general. So I go to open the actual question thread, where I see that up-voted, word-for-word answer already posted by a different user three weeks ago.
So in my head, all I see is someone trying to sneak through duplicate answers in search of rep or answer count. Since Spam is defined as "Exists only to promote a product or service, does not disclose the author's affiliation", I instead flagged for Moderator intervention and described that it was a copy-paste of a previous answer.
Well that was wrong. No intervention required apparently, which I feel like I would have recognized if the audit had just shown me the actual author information outright. The only reason I went to the thread itself was because of that suspicious info but even still, I would have seen that it was an existing, up-voted answer and realized this was an audit.
So I guess my question is am I overthinking the review process entirely? Should I be treating each post in the queue truly at face value and not consider it in the context of the thread as a whole? Or is this just a trap I have to look out for? Even then, how do I differentiate between that kind of audit and a situation like I had assumed, where legitimate answers are being duplicated by new users?
I take this seriously so I want to know how the experienced reviewers are handling it.