I spent a few days exploring the content of meta and discovered that the tag wiki is sorely lacking content. So as a part of exploring the content of meta, I began to update selected topics in the tag wiki with two types of information: (1) a selection of links to posts on the tag subject and (2) associated tags.
As I do not have a great deal of reputation nor the necessary reputation in any of the meta tags, any edits I made were suggested edits that were then reviewed and either approved or rejected. As far as I can tell from my limited experience few of my suggested edits were rejected by reviewers.
It appears that a user objected to the suggested wiki edits which has been approved and decided to revert them. They did this on at least two topics:
- deleted-questions see https://meta.stackoverflow.com/posts/256667/revisions
- code-of-conduct see https://meta.stackoverflow.com/posts/371411/revisions
Why can a single person arbitrarily revert changes that have gone through a review just because they object to changes? This goes beyond modifying changes to make them more accurate or to remove an inappropriate tag or link.
I'm not sure what having these edits flagged for moderator attention means however I have seen nothing that indicates that a moderator has taken any action against my account.
The rationale for the changes I made
I made the two edit choices of links to posts and adding meta tags based on my experience with reviewing and editing product documentation as well as my experience editing Wikipedia. The goal was the DRY principle while maintaining all or most of what originally existed in the tag wiki entry and adding additional, useful content.
One helpful tag wiki entry I found was the flags wiki which had a list of the various types of flags with clickable links (see https://meta.stackoverflow.com/posts/250285/revisions) done back in 2018. The same user had done something similar for reputation (see https://meta.stackoverflow.com/posts/250233/revisions).
What was nice about this was any reference to the meta tag of flags or reputation in any other topic in the tag wiki would lead the user to those lists. More importantly adding associated tags to a wiki entry was not something new that I just dreamed up.
For adding links to posts, I actively looked for posts that appeared to be used when closing a posted question as a dupe. I thought that since the community thought those posted questions were sufficient for using as canonical posts, then they should be part of the tag wiki entry in order for users to find them easily.
I found the following two posted meta discussions of people complaining about too many wiki edits:
- Rapid-fire Community Wiki edits; how should this be handled?
- How do we deal with faulty tag wiki edits?
Neither of these seem applicable to my questions.
Why so many edits in such a short time?
I'm retired and now have the time to explore Stack Overflow. I have spent little time on Meta until after retirement as I really didn't have much time for it. Just as I am now exploring some of the microcontroller Reddits because now I have time.
I also appear to be in the autistic spectrum which means that it is very easy for me to get sucked into something such as exploring links, reviewing content, and pulling together various threads of posts. For me there is a kind of joy in looking at just one more thing before I shut down for the day, one more time of comparing and contrasting various posts in order to develop a mental model of how it all fits together and then documenting those linkages.
Questions
When can a meta tag wiki be updated and under what conditions can a user suggest an edit?
How often can a user update the meta tag wiki and how many suggested edits can a user make per day?
What criteria should a user use to determine that a suggested edit that has been approved should be reverted?
How would I know what moderator action has been taken and how any such action has affected my account and the edits I have made in the meta tag wiki?