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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:

enter image description here

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)?

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    Technically this one didn't really need the full error traceback as the error message there is very distinctive. I'd agree though that the review was bad since if the error message appears so specific I'd expect at least a quick search for duplicates (And it is a duplicate since that error message is somewhat common). Commented Oct 14 at 9:50
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    Regarding duplicates, I don't think we can expect reviewers searching for duplicates as that can require subject-matter expertise and requires quite some work that reviewers aren't informed about having to do.
    – dan1st
    Commented Oct 14 at 10:04
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    "This question doesn't include the error they are facing." and the reviewer even commented "Providing the error message or output sample helps quickly identify the problem and solution" and then approved 11 seconds after posting the comment.
    – VLAZ
    Commented Oct 14 at 10:06
  • Good catch. But I have no idea what their intention approving (and likely upvoting, the approved post has one upvote and one downvote) was after writing that comment. Maybe they didn't understand what the approve option is actually doing and what it means?
    – dan1st
    Commented Oct 14 at 10:07
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    I'm more interested if that spur of reviews was driven by the new widget and/or badge that focuses on number of reviews did.
    – VLAZ
    Commented Oct 14 at 10:13
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    I also fear that this wouldn't get better with reputation incentives which are solely focused on approved questions...
    – dan1st
    Commented Oct 14 at 10:15
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    Side quesstion, I don't see the "filter by user" button from your screenshot; how do you enable that?
    – Thom A
    Commented Oct 14 at 11:03
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    @ThomA I wrote a user script for that.
    – dan1st
    Commented Oct 14 at 11:09
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    Of course it's not built in functionality... Why would it be. >_<
    – Thom A
    Commented Oct 14 at 11:12
  • I think that moderators have tooling for that but I don't know what the mod tooling for it looks like.
    – dan1st
    Commented Oct 14 at 11:49
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    I've flagged users with questionable (non-SG) review behavior (taking 3-10 seconds per review) and got rejected/declined. I'm not doing that again any time soon. Commented Oct 14 at 19:17
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    Yes, I agree that this is something requiring input from moderators. That being said, I think it should be clear what we should do and don't (for example if my flag description was the issue, it would be good to know about a preferred way of informing mods about these issues), what is considered abuse in terms of reviewing and I want to know whether I should continue flagging which is why I created this MSO post.
    – dan1st
    Commented Oct 14 at 20:40
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    There seem to be a handful of users who do almost all approvals, despite most other actions being spread across many more users. This seems to subvert the point of staging ground. There should be a limit on the number of individual actions one can take, not just the total. E.g. max 10 approvals, 10 off-topic etc. See here for the prevalence of robo approvers: stackoverflow.com/staging-ground/… Commented Oct 18 at 23:13
  • In general, I think you should still flag it if you see reviewers with problematic behavior. Regarding reviewers doing approvals, it seems like around 104-110 (3.75-4%) reviewers are doing 50% of approvals and 511 (18.4%) reviewers are doing 80% of approvals if my code/calculations are correct (but note that this includes reviewers who only reviewed a single question etc). (state: all approvals up to 17.10. at some time so it includes the betas).
    – dan1st
    Commented Oct 19 at 0:33

2 Answers 2

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To answer the general question: yes, do flag users that may be robo-reviewing in any queue. Review audits are not always enough to catch robo-reviewers; a moderator is needed to inspect the review tasks and impose review suspensions as needed.

(As a matter of fact, other flags reporting possible robo-reviewers you made were marked helpful.)

About the case at hand however, I had a look at the links you provided and at a bunch of other recent reviews from that user and frankly, while I agree they made several mistakes, I didn't get a strong impression they were robo-reviewing, i.e. clicking through tasks without even thinking. They did skip some reviews, indicating the user is aware they can "Skip" reviews.

For Staging Ground, moderators can also see how long the user took to review each task1. The time this user took to review each task seemed somewhat reasonable.

For some of the reviews you noted, as well as some others I checked, it seems the more correct action would've been "conditionally approve with minor edits" or "duplicate". Should these kind of mis-review be treated the same as deleting a code-only post in Low Quality Answers? We don't review-suspend users for failing to identify dupes in Triage either.

Staging Ground is a new review queue on Stack Overflow. I feel we, moderators but perhaps the community as a whole too, haven't yet set the bar for what is considered a so poor performance to be worthy of a review ban. Therefore, in my opinion, the sensible approach is to handle these reports conservatively in favor of the reviewer.

Also, I'd advise against counting the number of non-approvals to sustain an allegation of robo-reviewing. There might be correlation, but not necessarily causation.

Perhaps I could've marked the flag "helpful" to signal that reports like this are appreciated.


1: this UX is very helpful and really should be extended to other queues

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    "Perhaps I could've marked the flag "helpful" to signal that reports like this are appreciated." Declining flags tells the flagger that they should not have flagged. Unless the user had the information to know that the flag was not helpful, you should always mark as helpful as it allows you to use your information to make that decision. Also, "review-suspend" is not the only possible action that you could take. "Hey, a lot of your reviews have mistakes, please watch out for ..." is a reasonable message to send to a bad reviewer.
    – mdfst13
    Commented Oct 15 at 3:05
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    Perhaps this is a feature miss. Maybe flags should be markable as helpful, accepted, or declined. Then you wouldn't have to mark acceptable flags as helpful or declined. Perhaps "message the reviewer" should be a systemic action rather than something that you do manually.
    – mdfst13
    Commented Oct 15 at 3:09
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    @mdfst13 it’s not possible to message a user about reviews without review-suspending them. It’s possible to send them a profile-level warning, but I strongly disagree with conflating site-wide behavior with poor reviews.
    – blackgreen Mod
    Commented Oct 15 at 6:17
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    In cases where it looks like the reviewer has good intentions and might not understand some options, do you think it's a good idea to contact the reviewer in chat or similar?
    – dan1st
    Commented Oct 15 at 8:58
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    @dan1st mmm, I don't think it's very scalable. If the user builds up enough objectively harmful reviews, then a moderator might reach out via the appropriate channels. I just don't think we got to that point yet for this particular user.
    – blackgreen Mod
    Commented Oct 15 at 9:39
  • "Perhaps I could've marked the flag "helpful" to signal that reports like this are appreciated." - at the least, it might be a good idea to tighten the bolts on the documented best practices, which I hope exist, among moderators about when to mark something helpful. A flag not being acted upon is not a hard "no", that's for sure.
    – Gimby
    Commented Oct 16 at 9:00
-40

I don't believe quality control of staging ground reviews should be included in moderators scope of work. Flags shouldn't be used for this purpose, unless the user approved obvious spam or rude/abusive questions repeatedly to prove there's a pattern.

There is a lack of quality control in staging grounds, which are present in other review queues. This should be dealt only by the company using

  • Audit reviews similar to suggestions queue and/or
  • Voting: Currently, the approval and denial votes are not balanced as one approval vote overides multiple denial votes. There's a lack of consensus here.

Having said all that, even if nothing more is implemented, there are regular close vote reviews, after posting. Do we flag users who repeatedly vote to reopen questions, which we believe are unfit for site or users who repeatedly vote to close questions which we believe are really well researched? Flagging shouldn't be used for quality control.

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    In my experience, flags that notify moderators about reviewers with a series of wrong reviews in the Low Quality queues are handled by them. I don't think a single review warrants a flag, but there are often people who abuse reviews. The last terrible reviewer I noticed left 20 link only votes (in LQP) in 5 minutes, most on posts without links. How else would we stop them?
    – BDL
    Commented Oct 14 at 11:03
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    "Do we flag users who repeatedly vote to reopen questions, which we believe are unfit for site" yes, assuming you find such a user. And also their reopen votes should be blatantly wrong, not just disagreement. But yes, you can vote such cases. Same with the close votes. Again, they have to be blatantly wrong. Not just a few simple mistakes in a large body or disagreement on what is closeable (when it's clear different people might have different opinion). Clear patterns of wrong review actions are definitely flaggable.
    – VLAZ
    Commented Oct 14 at 11:05
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    "I don't believe quality control of staging ground reviews should be included in moderators scope of work" - who else should do it with the current system? // "Audit reviews similar to suggestions queue" - audits have many issues // "Currently, the approval and denial votes are not balanced" - there aren't really denial votes. The most important Staging Ground action is "Requires Major Changes" which can be done single-handedly and in case there is a dispute over questions, that should IMO not be handled in the SG anyways because the SG isn't made for disagreeing reviewers.
    – dan1st
    Commented Oct 14 at 11:08
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    I have many flags (including recent ones) where I've flagged robo-reviewers and they have been both marked as helpful and the users stop reviewing/submitting suggested edits (either due to education or suspensions from the action). I don't see why SG reviews should be different. If moderators lack the tools to action such tasks, then that doesn't make them "not helpful"; the problem then is the tooling (which we know is bad anyway).
    – Thom A
    Commented Oct 14 at 11:11
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    @ThomA Robo reviewing is obviously crossing a line. But I don't see any such issues with OP's post.
    – TheMaster
    Commented Oct 14 at 13:33
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    @VLAZ who decides what's blatantly wrong? As said in my answer, Spam or rude/abusive... yes.. sure. But, most if not all of what OP said is debatable.
    – TheMaster
    Commented Oct 14 at 13:35
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    @TheMaster if you can't decide what's blatantly wrong, feel free to not raise flags for such behaviour.
    – VLAZ
    Commented Oct 14 at 13:40
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    Yes, lets introduce audits because they're working so well for all the other review queues.
    – Kevin B
    Commented Oct 14 at 14:17
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    or maybe... not attract people to reviews who aren't going to take it seriously and instead are using it to chase badges/clout.
    – Kevin B
    Commented Oct 14 at 15:23
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    If someone is voting to reopen obviously terrible questions, I would absolutely flag them, I don't know about you. Commented Oct 14 at 15:56
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    @Starship The problem is terms like "obviously terrible" and "blatantly wrong" are subjective. What's terrible to me maybe acceptable to you and excellent to someone else. Isn't that why consensus exist in the first place? Moderators are and should be exception handlers -when there's a really rare exception that the community couldn't handle on it's own. I would argue coming to meta is much more fruitful rather flagging, as it at least shows consensus.
    – TheMaster
    Commented Oct 14 at 16:00
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    Umm...okay how's this. If a post should be closed, then you shouldn't vote to reopen it. If a user has a pattern of voting to reopen questions that should be closed (which is not subjective, do they meet the closure criteria), then a flag is reasonable (particularly if you suspect some form of robo-reviewing). @TheMaster Commented Oct 14 at 16:02
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    @Starship Robo reviewing, Yes, I agree with flagging. But, the rest, meh... Every close reason is more or less subjective. Also, let's turn the tables a little ...Do we also need to flag close voters who VTC using the reason "Needs more focus/too broad" as a proxy for "no research effort"(when it is not to be done meta.stackoverflow.com/a/283185 )? I know for a fact it is still done blatantly and if I were to flag, I have to keep on flagging every day.
    – TheMaster
    Commented Oct 14 at 16:11
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    @TheMaster Okay, walk me through that. For example, I think its quite objective whether or not an asker included a minimal reproducable examples. I think its objective if a questions asks for off-site resources. I think it's objective if a question asks a lot of different questions in 1. If you want to flag that, then you're welcome to, see if your flag is accepted or not... Commented Oct 14 at 16:15
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    I don't agree with all close reasons being generally subjective. While there are cases for all close reasons with the decision of some specific question falling under the criteria being subjective, this doesn't mean that the close reasons are generally subjective. For example, "not about programming" or "not written in English" are objective concepts and there are questions that should objectively closed under these reasons (but there are still some questions where that decision is subjective, especially if the question is right on the line of that close reason).
    – dan1st
    Commented Oct 14 at 18:50

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