This is particularly useful in assessing how much I want to trust the user's contribution or feedback.
I think this is falling into the long-existing trap of using rep as a proxy for how much to trust someone's experience/alignment with site norms. Unfortunately, even help pages that way predate SG reinforce that. It can often coincide with a person having more site experience/alignment with site norms, but not fully, and it's frequently challenged how much and what kind of weight rep should hold in the system and in peoples' minds. Not that I can tell you what to believe.
At least for me, rep has little to do with understanding of what makes a good question. At least- not directly. A relatively stronger proxy would be the reviewer's reviewer stats (how "successful" are the questions that get published after they leave reviews? / how "successful" are the questions they publish from SG?). Even those are debatable as proxies. Alternative ideas that could be good for discussion are how much other reviewers in the closure queues agree with them. In any case, I challenge this idea of the value of seeing a reviewer's rep in SG to decide how much to trust the reviewer's feedback. I'm not totally against it. I don't think it's actively harmful. I just don't think it's a good solution for your use-case.
Also, I just... don't think it's particularly hard to tell if you should "trust" someone's feedback in SG. Actually, I just can't tell what this has to do with trust at all. Most SG feedback (at least the canned comments, which I find cover the majority of issues that SG is intended to deal with) are very straightforward. They either apply to the post, or they don't. If they don't apply, it should be easy to tell, and you should maybe flag the comment for removal as "no longer needed". If the feedback is applicable and in the scope of what SG is supposed to be for, trust doesn't even need to come into the picture. The feedback should be actioned.
[status-deferred]
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