So I failed two review audits and got suspended for two days …
I'm not complaining, but I want to understand why the system works the way it works.
- https://stackoverflow.com/review/first-posts/28884296 – downvoted due to the question consisting mostly of a screenshot of code/error message. There's no code to reproduce and very little detail on how the Python environment is set up. No review effort visible besides a vague "I already reinstalled". Apparently, it is a highly-upvoted question. I stand corrected. Strike 1.
- https://stackoverflow.com/review/first-posts/28891424 – I upvoted because the answer proposes a solution to the problem: Set "localizable" on the form to the default value. This totally looks like a valid answer to the question. The other 6 existing questions were hidden from the review view (to make the audit more difficult I guess?) Strike 2.
Well, everybody makes mistakes. I accept that. So I waited for a few days and started reviewing again after 4 days (i.e. another 2 days after the ban was lifted).
Today I am reviewing again, passing 2 (or more) (tricky) review audits. Then, an answer to a Robot framework question pops up to be reviewed: https://stackoverflow.com/review/first-posts/28926252 – I upvote, because the question proposes to use A instead of B and links to the official documentation for the proposed method of the framework.
Bam… 1 single review audit failed within 3 days. I am now suspended for 4 days and the infobox shows me all 3 failed audits (so one audit from today and the 2 audits from 4 days ago which caused the first ban). So it only takes one vote counter to the consensus to be blocked for 4 days? That's a bit harsh … especially since the posted answer seems to actually answer the question in good faith.
Is this really the way that reviewing and the audits are supposed to work? It's not very motivating or educational to be blocked for several days for misjudging one single review. Doesn't SO live from community consensus to build a good knowledge library? Bad posts will automatically receive the right amount of down/closevotes.
At the same time, I miss more information about why a post is good/bad. The audit explanation is just "look, this was a good post, yet you downvoted". I get that, but why is it a good post? What exactly makes it good (or bad)? Without this information, this is training a human-based, distributed pattern-matching ML-algorithm – don't take this statement too seriously. There should be space for discussion of (opposing) review decisions.
Attention – Opinion: Why are users punished for trying to review posts and sometimes making questionable decisions or mistakes? Writing answers is not always possible, so time can be spent reviewing to increase the site's quality. Receiving day-long bans for a single wrong click is so very frustrating.
(Now knowing that the next mistake will ban me for 8+ days, I'd rather not spend time on reviewing at all in fear of choosing wrong on another post. It almost feels like help in reviewing is actually not needed/wanted.)
It is difficult to justify one's past decision(s) leading to a ban after the fact. Opening a meta post is an option, but so is simply stopping to visit the review queues altogether.
I found several other posts claiming similar problems with the review audits and suggesting improvements (although it looks like some of them or their answers have attracted massive amounts of downvotes):