**No, there is absolutely nothing wrong with going through a user's posts and correcting recurring problems.** This is not "targeting" in any negative sense; it doesn't harm the user in any way to have their posts improved. In fact, it helps them, and not uniquely them, but the entire site. That said, you need to fix *all* the problems with the post, not just one or two things. This is a basic rule of edits, though, so I suspect you just omitted it because it is so obvious. Still, it's worth emphasizing. There was recently a concern raised on Meta about the [misuse of formatting](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/355183/are-edits-which-decorate-the-post-with-markdown-good). I would encourage you to go through and fix offending posts, whether they come from the same user or not, but I would also encourage you to make your edits *count*. So, don't just go through and mass-fix blockquote formatting. Consider and edit the post as a whole. The real "con" to this is one that you didn't mention—a bunch of edits in a short time can be very disruptive. Edits "bump" the post, putting the associated question in the "interesting" queue, which many of our answerers use to find questions to answer. If you bump a bunch of old, answered questions by editing them, it can make it more difficult for them to find questions to answer. This is another good reason to make your edits count (see above), and also a reason why you should spread them out over a bit larger period of time (which will naturally occur if you're making each of them count). As for your stated con: > **Con:** A big reason why I see not to do this, is that the user might not like if another user suddenly changes all their posts. They also may think the editor is serial-editing for the wrong reason. This isn't really a problem. Stack Overflow is collaboratively edited, so other users are *encouraged* to clean up posts, provided that they respect the intent of the original author. Fixing formatting, spelling, and grammar mistakes is not violating the intent of the author, so this is fair game. If someone has a problem with this, point them to [this page](https://stackoverflow.com/help/editing). You're right that you might get accused of editing for the wrong reasons, but this is, again, spurious. If you're doing as I advised and making your edits count, then you are absolutely *not* editing for the "wrong reasons"—you are editing for the *right* reasons. Yes, as long as you have [<2k reputation](https://stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/edit), you are getting credit for your edits, but (A) your edits are subject to review by the community and will be rejected if they're invalid, and (B) you *deserve* credit for your edits if your edits are actually useful. That's why we award it in the first place. As ever, leaving a quality edit summary can help to alleviate problems. First of all, if your edits are subject to peer review, it can help your edits get approved. Even if you have full editing privileges, these serve an instructional purpose to the original author, explaining to them *why* you saw fit to make the edit. It doesn't always happen, but sometimes people really do learn from this and stop making the same mistakes in the future.