Ignoring the initial impetus for this question (which was caused by a confusion between the user and the UX in an oddball situation), let's address the main thrust of it. We explicitly do not allow users whose edits have to be reviewed (those with less than 2K rep) to make extremely small edits (less than 6 characters). And we encourage reviewers to reject edits which do not substantially improve the post, typically by fixing most if not all of the problems in it. But once your edits don't have to be reviewed, you're basically on the honor system. If you have 2K rep, you're expected to know what we expect of editors. The OP of a post does have a greater degree of control, since they're notified of edits to their posts, can cast binding review votes to edits to their posts, and can always roll them back even if they have less than 2K rep. But other than that, they're simply another user. [The point of allowing users to edit posts](https://stackoverflow.com/help/editing) is to improve the *presentation* of content on the site. We specifically don't want people editing posts in a way that changes their intent. Yes, you can add text, embellish things, maybe explain a point a bit better, but we don't really encourage adding genuinely new content to a post. As such, most edits are *supposed* to be grammatical and formatting related. We allow people to edit for the primary purpose of letting them improve the presentation of content. > my guess to earn points or visibility or not sure what Once you have [edit-anywhere privileges](https://stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/edit), you no longer earn reputation for making edits. And, as previously stated, excessively trivial edit suggestions tend to be rejected. So the reason why these edits were made is obvious: the user thinks the post is better that way.