## Why? Because they help reviewers understand the review process. ---------- A few months ago when I was a new user and earned the privilege to review, I eagerly started reviewing the first two queues at 500 reputation. I wanted to help! But I didn't understand how one should judge the quality of first posts and late answers. More importantly, I failed to understand the importance of the "skip" button. I didn't upvote the high quality posts in audits and was banned for 48 hours. ## Result The ban made me aware that I was doing _something_ wrong. I started participating in Meta to learn the rules, and am [an active participant till date](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/users?tab=participation). I became a better reviewer and after doing tons of reviews between that day and today, in all six review queues, I never failed an audit or got banned. And most importantly, I learnt to distinguish between a good post and a bad post. _I don't remember what those audits were, or whether they were good audits or bad audits._ Even if someone would have handpicked them, it wouldn't have mattered. The ban introduced me to Meta, and helped me improve myself. That's all that matters at the end of the day. From my own experience, I learnt that audits _are_ useful.