Properly reviewing posts in the Staging Ground takes time but sometimes there are users that just approve any question they come across or are closing lots of questions as "Not about programming" or similar when these questions are actually missing details. Reviewing questions like that diminishes the work other reviewers have put into these questions (e.g. if the author didn't understand or address the feedback or only partially addressed it), preventing questions that could be made better by the author from being published (in case of closing questions for missing details like a MCVE) and defeats the purpose of the Staging Ground.
I have raised a custom flag about a user approving many Staging Ground posts (in short succession) where many of these questions shouldn't have been approved. This flag was declined:
This is what their reviews look like which got me to check their individual reviews (these are filtered from the public review history and happened between 2024-10-12 06:58:09Z and 2024-10-12 09:56:09Z).
It started when Karl Knechtel noticed a questionable review which got me to check for other reviews by that reviewer. I found that they approved a lot of questions without looking into these questions at all. Furthermore, the questions they approved had an upvote no matter how bad these questions were so they probably used the "Add an upvote when posted on main site" button on every question. If someone approves and upvotes a question, I would assume they at least read it and like something about it.
The flag was about the following questions:
- The question I flagged is obviously not a question to a point and should not have been approved and any reviewing paying at least some attention should have noticed that. It also looks a bit like it could be a spam seed but it was closed on the main site so we'd never know.
- This question didn't include what the author expected and what they want ("looks not nice and is a little bit buggy").
- This question didn't include any logs and the response was posted as an image of text
- This question doesn't specify which part of the issue the author had a problem with/what they tried.
- This question was flagged as a dupe before and the user approved it without looking at it
- This question is not formatted at all which was also noted in the comments.
- This question didn't include how they wanted to use the access key in question, what exactly resulted in the error and didn't provide any logs.
- This question doesn't explain what they mean with "putting the code in the text field area" and also didn't include what exactly they expected and where
actual_time_needed
(and similar) comes from. - This question doesn't include the error they are facing.
- This question is not formatted properly (the images were just links that are partially in codeblocks).
- This question doesn't include what the author expected/how the actual result is different and it seems they forgot to include the image when writing "here is the image for reference".
- This question doesn't include the full error/backtrace they are facing.
- This question is missing a MCVE (at least their build configuration should have been included).
I can understand that one can overlook things in question but when a significant amount of approved question has obvious issues that should have been addressed before these questions are posting, it's just not paying any attention to reviews and getting non-questions to the main site. While most individual reviews can be seen as overlooking something, this definitely looks like a pattern and I cannot accept approving this question (especially given that they upvoted it as the other questions they approved) as a proper review.
Do I have too high standards for what I expect reviewers to check before approving questions in the Staging Ground? If so, is it allowed to just approve every question I come across in the Staging Ground no matter how bad it is or where is the line between ok reviews and things that should be flagged (do we first need Community consensus on what a good Staging Ground question looks like)?
Is flagging even the right option for questionable Staging Ground reviews or would it be better to try to communicate with the reviewers by creating a new chatroom or similar?
Or was it my flag description that caused it to be declined? I had to make it short due to the character limit so I couldn't include a proper description on why I think these questions should have not been approved. Should I instead explain the flags like in this MSO post in a private gist or similar and link that from my flag? Is there a recommendation on how to properly flag cases where there are many relevant posts (I use things like [q](/q/<id>)
or use a very short text instead of the q
for getting many questions into the character limit)?