I'm wondering how one becomes a moderator, say, on Super User. Is there a process? A certain number of reputation points? I noticed that when one hits 10k, he has "access to moderator dashboard". What does this mean? Can one choose whether or not to become a moderator?
feedback
|
|
Moderators are proposed by either members of the community, or by Jeff. There's an election on meta to see if the choices are OK with the community; then they become moderators on one of the sites and meta. There have been cases where users have either chosen not to be moderator (the latest Stack Overflow election had one case, Jason Cohen; the moderator position went to Jonathan Sampson) or have given up that privilege/curse (Diago and splattne on Super User). The 10k tools are different from the moderation tools; a moderator has both more power and more responsibility (just like Spider-Man). The most important one that we, as users, can see is the fact that their votes are binding. If they vote to close, delete flag, the vote is automatically enforced, there's no need for anyone else to cast a vote. You can find more information about moderator powers and roles in the FAQ, and more information about the nominations and elections on the Stack Overflow blog (check the moderators and community categories). | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
feedback
|
|
As alex and Sam152 have said, moderators are elected. The moderation tools available to 10k+ rep users are listed in detail in the accepted answer to this question: Moderators have more super powers than 10k+ rep users do. | |||||||
feedback
|
|
Once you reach 10k rep you get a few extra goodies (delete closed questions, access to moderation tools), but moderators will full privileges have to be nominated and elected by the community. See here for previous elections and results. | |||||
feedback
|