The blog post says account suspensions will be from 2 to 7 days. "...if the problem behaviors continue beyond the timed suspension, your account is very likely to be permanently deleted."

This user is suspended until Oct. 25 (as I write this, that is 28 days away). If the offense was so egregious as to warrant a month long suspension, why isn't the account just deleted?

EDIT

An even more extreme example is this user, suspended until Feb. 4, 2011 (as I write this, that is 364 days away).

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re your edit, there's huge amount of discussion on meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/23366/suspension-reasons – balpha Feb 5 '10 at 19:35
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Your recent update invalidates some of the answers. I wouldn't have overwritten the second paragraph. Simply adding "EDIT:" and the new example would be better. – gnostradamus Feb 5 '10 at 19:35
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@gno: Good advice. I took it. – raven Feb 5 '10 at 20:14
Are the user links even correct? I didn't find anything unusual with them as it stands now – prusswan Mar 16 '12 at 6:46

5 Answers

up vote 15 down vote accepted

The general process:

stage 1
email warning about specifics of unacceptable behavior1

stage 2
1-7 day suspension2

stage 3
30 day suspension

stage 4
120+ day suspension or account now eligible for deletion2

You advance from stage to stage by continuing to engage in the unacceptable behaviors that were identified in stage 1. Only one user has gotten to stage 4 so far.

1 assuming we have an email, which we might not; email is not required to use our sites
2 depending on severity and type of unacceptable behavior

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The dude in the question got a meaner ban stick then your schedule gives him credit for: meta.stackoverflow.com/users/5640 – Evan Carroll Feb 5 '10 at 21:05
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stage 4 is a harsh mistress – Jeff Atwood Feb 5 '10 at 21:17
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365 > (120 || deletion) What did he do to piss you off this time? – perbert Feb 5 '10 at 21:34
is it an all account for all family sites or just the one behavior is poor in? – RSolberg Feb 5 '10 at 22:15
@voyager are you seriously going to argue that a 1 year suspension is worse than getting totally deleted? – TM. Feb 5 '10 at 22:58
@che - just the one. – Adam Davis Feb 6 '10 at 0:57
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Having witnessed "Chetwood's" conduct here, on the blog, and elsewhere, I'm surprised it took this long for such a hefty reaction. If anything, I would say Jeff was long-suffering and beyond fair. – Jonathan Sampson Feb 6 '10 at 4:58
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@TM being banned for a year is exactly the same of being deleted. Really, it's a big neon sign that says GO AWAY!!!. I guess that was the intention, but don't sugar coat it with an unrealistical 1 year ban. – perbert Feb 6 '10 at 7:02
"Don't be a jerk"... After multiple rounds in the box and the behavior continues what exactly should have happened? Just because you disagree does not mean the entire community doesn't, it means you don't! – RSolberg Feb 6 '10 at 8:10
@Jeff, there should be a warning before each suspension (with details so that the user can change behavior). – Lance Roberts Sep 2 '10 at 19:22
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@Lance - The warning prior to each subsequent suspension was the previous suspension. – Adam Davis Jan 12 '11 at 14:00

There's no way to know for sure why the account was suspended, so what follows is a wild and irresponsible guess:

The admins want the suspended user to just go away.

If they'd deleted the account, it's quite possible that the user would merely have recreated it. If they'd used a shorter suspension (and it's not inconceivable that they have, in the past) then it's just that much more likely the user would come back and go back to the same old tricks.

It may well be something like the protection schemes used by some authentication systems, where they make a user wait progressively longer after each failed attempt to log in. The user may never be able to use the site properly, but at least he'll be tying up less and less of the moderators' time while he continues to fail.

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I thought I commented already, I guess I didn't. (-1) Unless the admins told you that they want the user to go away, you shouldn't be publishing your beliefs about their opinions. If you want to talk in general about the value of deterrence, then go ahead. But only the admins can tell us what the admins are thinking. – devinb Sep 28 '09 at 13:07
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@devinb: i can't help but wonder if you actually read the first sentence in this answer... – Shog9 Sep 28 '09 at 14:11

Bad boys, bad boys whatcha gonna do,
whatcha gonna do when they come for you?

alt text

Suspension is a penalty, and each time you tangle with the site administrators your penalty increases. The point is to limit their ability to continue their non-constructive behavior on the site.

If they make a new account during suspension, they are very limited in what they can do with low reputation, and if they are caught with a second account they'll be suspended for longer.

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This one doesn't work as well as the last edit I made to your posts. – perbert Feb 5 '10 at 21:36
Also, sockpuppetering is a big no-no. If you are caught with a new account, it will get merged, and you might be perma-banned. – perbert Feb 5 '10 at 21:41
Well, penalty increasing is one thing. Appropriateness of means another... – Ladybug Killer Feb 5 '10 at 22:03
Your image will not load. – Ether Feb 5 '10 at 23:15

It's certainly possible for someone to realize the error of their ways and become a valuable member of the community after 28 days.

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476 questions and 1 answer.

That account will most likely be deleted

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I was going to say that's hardly worthy of a suspension, but upon closer examination of his questions I think I understand now. – raven Sep 27 '09 at 21:56
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@Henk: perhaps a more telling statistic is the ratio of questions to votes : 476/20. That's not 20 up-votes either, that's 20 votes period. The user doesn't bother up-voting even most of the answers he accepts, and he doesn't accept answers to most of his questions. Then of course, there's all this: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/23404/… – Shog9 Sep 27 '09 at 22:13
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@Henk - No one can ask 476 great questions. Even the mighty Jon Skeet has probably asked a bad question once. – Super Long Names are Hilarious Sep 27 '09 at 22:38
That first answer of the user in question was just... wow... patently bad and looks like it was only there so that it wouldn't be "zero answers" on their scoreboard. – random Sep 27 '09 at 22:59
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I might add that the user has 27 pages of questions with 0 upvotes. Not 27 questions - 27 pages of questions. That's around 270 questions with 0 upvotes. 270 questions that no one thought were worth anything. Add to that around 8 pages (yes, pages again) of answers with negative scores. – Super Long Names are Hilarious Sep 27 '09 at 23:24
... not to mention the pages of negative questions. – Brad Gilbert Sep 28 '09 at 2:56
Yet, even some of the question with a negative vote count netted him some rep. – innaM Sep 28 '09 at 8:37
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(-1) The user has marked many questions with accepted answers. There is participation evident there. But most importantly, we don't know what the scenario was that caused the account to be suspended, so we should not be starting rumours. – devinb Sep 28 '09 at 13:03
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@devinb, why not? – jmfsg Sep 28 '09 at 13:35
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@devinb: We've discussed this to death. We don't really have a choice when it comes to rumours. Humans are curious and imaginative, and those two traits work with and against each other. In the absence of facts to sate curiosity, imagination takes over. And according to the Jeffest of Atwoods, this is by design. You can't tell a human to not speculate. You just can't. Speculation is a natural part of humanity. – XMLbog Sep 28 '09 at 13:46
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Then I was downvoted for being human – jmfsg Sep 28 '09 at 14:31

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