According to the editor in a deleted answer (for the benefit of sub-10k users):
- The change to protocol-relative URLs was to remove unnecessary characters from URLs that were going to resolve to HTTPS anyway.
- The change to reference notation for Markdown links was stylistic.
As I mentioned in my comment, the colons are part of this reference notation, not the URLs. Therefore, what you're looking at are indeed the protocol-relative URLs you're familiar with. With that out of the way, let's talk about the edit itself.
Protocol-relative URLs are considered unnecessary in the age of HTTPS-by-default — while things like HTTP Strict Transport Security, server-side HTTP-to-HTTPS redirects, and Stack Exchange itself being HTTPS are nice to have, having links that point to HTTPS URLs doesn't hurt, and changing them to protocol-relative has no positive impact on end users. If an edit does nothing to improve a post's links (examples of improvements include repairing broken links, changing them to point to a canonical mirror of the same content, etc), the edit shouldn't be made at all, as it would unnecessarily bump the post (particularly if it's been inactive for quite some time).
Similarly, we discourage edits that simply change the Markdown style and don't materially improve the post (unless perhaps the edits are removing things like extreme amounts of excess line breaks or whitespace that somehow made their way into the post content). I guess you could make a case for making it easier for other editors, but even putting aside the author's editing style, everyone has their own style, and what works better for you may not necessarily be effective for other editors — it may even be the complete opposite. You're just moving other people's cheese for the sake of it, while doing absolutely nothing for the usefulness or readability of the post itself.
Edits that modify or add content to a post using the editor's own style are less of an issue here and can be discussed separately.