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I have a question ban, but have been regularly editing, answering, commenting, voting, flagging, and now also reviewing. I know just about everything else can help against a question ban, but what about reviewing?

Reviewing is probably the most impactful to keeping this website clean (other than just good question/answer writing), so it would make sense if it did help. But how much? I viewed this meta thread, but it didn't say anything about reviews, although it did mention the exact rules aren't public

If it isn't, it needs to be. The people who put in the time to review but can't even ask questions need to be unbanned, because they actually help the site.

This also all goes for answer bans

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    Generally, positive contributions to the site will help with getting out of a post-ban. At least, lots of good answers can get you out of a question ban. I don't know if reviewing specifically will help, but I presume it does. How much reviewing is required will not be made public, but I expect it to be a lot. Fixing your questions (if you have a question ban) is probably the most straightforward way to get out of that ban though.
    – cigien
    Mar 12, 2021 at 14:57
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    It doesn't matter "they actually help the site". What matters is that they prove they are able to provide quality posts (either question or answers, depending on the type of ban)
    – yivi
    Mar 12, 2021 at 14:57
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    They can prove in two ways: By editing previous posts so they are better received, by posting new posts then the system gives them more opportunities (the q-ban allows you to post a new question every six months, the a-ban is different and more restrictive; can't really remember the details).
    – yivi
    Mar 12, 2021 at 15:04
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    Reated MSE post: Does reviewing posts help remove a post ban? Mar 12, 2021 at 15:05
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    @yivi What if your ban is mostly from duplicates (Nope not getting into how I feel about duplicates right now)? You can't "fix" a duplicate post. And we've all seen just how many duplicates are posted. Maybe this'll help: When you're going through the first-post queue, you are often editing someone's low quality question/answer into something at least good enough for other user's to answer. Clearly those people can write a good post, given they can at least edit a low-quality post to one. Mar 12, 2021 at 15:10
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    Posting duplicates doesn’t result in a ban. Posting badly received question does.
    – yivi
    Mar 12, 2021 at 15:13
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    @yivi the vast majority of the time, duplicates are badly received. Usually they are downvoted significantly before they are closed. You also avoided the second part of my comment. Mar 12, 2021 at 15:16
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    I am inclined to start-closing questions about post ban criteria as opinion-based :) Most info we can provide is pure speculation with some clues scattered around the network. Re: your response to yivi - not sure I follow why would being able to review posts of others would entail an ability to write a good post. You wouldn't expect a film critic to automatically be a good director, do you? Anyways, it is commendable that you try to positively contribute despite the q-ban. Mar 12, 2021 at 15:21
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    @CATboardBETA that’s not my experience. My experience is that questions that are duplicates and are poor (eg by not showing any evidence of research) are badly received. Duplicates that do show signs of research and are of good quality usually are not “downvoted significantly” before they are closed.
    – yivi
    Mar 12, 2021 at 15:24
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    @CATboardBETA I hate to be that guy, but this does not seem to be the case site-wise: data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/1384568/…. Nearly half of duped questions are positively received (and nearly all of them have at least 0-scored). Re: rewrites - still don't get why would it lead to improving question-asking skills. One can refactor a lot of code, but be none the wiser how to write better code - if they do good, it is because they are knowledgeable, not because they rewrote a thousand apps. Mar 12, 2021 at 16:02
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    @OlegValter That data doesn't include deleted posts (as far as I know), so votes of remaining questions don't mean much for this topic when they maybe only represent a small percentage of all closed dupe questions.
    – Tom
    Mar 12, 2021 at 16:49
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    @OlegValter To emphasize Tom's point, unless you're counting deleted posts, your query is actively biased towards only finding the dupes that were positively received, and says very little about how many dupes are poorly received. I will say that in my experience, reasonably asked questions are downvoted if they are dupes. And I'm not referring to blatant dupes even. I've frequently seen questions receive downvotes after a target is suggested, implying to me that the downvotes are because it's a dupe (standard caveat applies: I can't be sure why users downvote anything).
    – cigien
    Mar 12, 2021 at 17:32
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    @CATboardBeta - A couple (more than 2 but less than 4) poorly received questions wouldn’t result in a question ban. How many deleted questions do you have? This was poorly received due to the fact you didn’t make any attempt to show what you tried. So it was downvoted due to the fact it contained no attempt (code) not because it was a duplicate Mar 12, 2021 at 19:02
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    @OlegValter You're generally correct, yes, but there are also other reason why someone thought a delete vote is warranted (Q doesn't add new things to work as a signpost, for example), so we can only assume why such questions got deleted. So don't really know how many deleted question there are, how they were received, why they there received like that and why they were deleted. What I try to say is: looking into the database doesn't really provide us a clear picture for this specific question. But I appreciate your effort there.
    – Tom
    Mar 12, 2021 at 22:08
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    @Tom - although I stand by the notion that inspecting what is publicly available does give us insight into how many posts closed as duplicates are downvoted (in contrast to just claiming that someone's personal experience means the matters are the same site-wide), I do understand your and cigien's issue with the data on closed questions since I agree that we do not know what's going on in the deleted part. I would love to get my hands on such a data to analyse, but alas... Mar 14, 2021 at 0:34

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The only thing that will truly help you get out of a question ban is improving your questions so they get upvoted. Same thing goes for question bans, answer bans, etc - the only thing that'll get you out of an answer ban is improving your answers.

In fact, by posting this Meta question, you are on your way to getting out of a ban, because the Meta effect will draw attention to your questions and either get them upvoted or get you suggestions to improve them. That's how I got out of my question ban, actually.

Looking at your downvoted questions, all I can tell you is to ask a more specific question - instead of just asking "How do I do this?" ask "I tried to do this, but that happened instead. How do I fix my code?" Also provide a minimal reproducible example of course.

Good answers contribute a tiny amount to a question ban, but not enough that it'll get you out of the ban. Everything else contributes little or not at all to your question ban.

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    I find your second paragraph quite enlightening... I never really thought about even the idea of a Meta questions causing your account to get attention (Meta Effect). It almost feels like it shouldn't be possible. Mar 12, 2021 at 20:42
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    Or dig oneself deeper as the Meta Effect can turn both ways (but for now seems all is well in this case). Just wanted to warn readers that drawing attention on Meta could backfire. Mar 12, 2021 at 21:39
  • @OlegValteriswithUkraine Drawing attention to my very bad question (for feedback purposes) granted me a decent amount of downvotes, and a question ban (again).
    – Blue Robin
    Feb 23 at 21:39

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