I ask as a moderator of security.se. Would it be better if moderators didn't gain/lose reputation for their questions and answers? We are already supposed to represent the communities we mod, and we already have full access to the tools that are the 'prize' for good participants. So perhaps we, like the speaker in the UK house of commons, should not take part in the day to day politics. We lead by example, not by points-scoring.

EDIT OK, so people don't want that because they want to carry on showing off their rep even if they are mods. I can accept that, thanks for the discussion :)

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Agree!!!!!! Great Idea! +1 – Linuxmint Dec 16 '10 at 0:05
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Why don't you just CW your answers? That gives all moderators the choice, and provides reasoning behind the scoring, which would just look confusing if moderators stopped getting rep without CW flags as an audit trail. – Robert Harvey Dec 16 '10 at 0:08
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@Robert Harvey: This would be a bad. Nobody should be wiki-ing their posts arbitrarily, much less a moderator. Wiki has a purpose and it isn't simply to bow out of the reputation system on a whim. – Robert Cartaino Dec 16 '10 at 1:41
@Robert: What is its purpose, exactly? I've never been entirely certain. – Robert Harvey Dec 16 '10 at 6:15
@RobertHarvey Search Meta for Community Wiki and you will find a few references to it's exact purpose. – Diago Dec 16 '10 at 7:31
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@Robert Harvey: Think Wikipedia: Used when the answer(s) will need to be the result of a highly collaborative effort. You're cedeing ownership because the final answer is the sum contribution of everyone, not the product of one author. An answer can be made wiki when you need/expect others to flesh out your initial post. A question can be made wiki if the value of the thread is in the entire collection of answers (like a list). -- Nowhere in that definition does it say "wiki because I don't want reputation" nor does it say "wiki because the question is marginally off-topic." – Robert Cartaino Dec 16 '10 at 14:24

3 Answers

up vote 13 down vote accepted

Maybe hiding rep is sane (maybe), but canceling it out entirely is kind of demotivating for mods; they're users too, who like answering questions and getting rep just like anyone else. You also need to factor in that you're a pro-tem mod; it's not necessarily permanent, and it would be kind of annoying to suddenly start at 1 rep after the permanent mod elections in a few months. Same thing for mods that decide they want to step down

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I don't think you understand how the platform's reputation system works - it's calculated now, using the historical record of votes and bounties. Taking that into account would mean that if you stepped down as mod you'd get your reputation calculated. That said, while I disagree with you it's clear your answer represents what people in the community want, therefore I accept it as representative (which is what meta is for). I just think mods should be motivated by making the community work, not by points-scoring. There's potential for abuse (don't know if it's happened). – Graham Lee Dec 17 '10 at 13:26
@GrahamLee, I disagree with your assumption that mods are motivated by rep, and your edit to the OP completely misses the points raised in the answers here. – Rebecca Chernoff Dec 17 '10 at 13:37
@Rebecca, mods "like answering questions and getting rep", and "get a \"kick\" out of being upvoted and having lots of numbers below [their] name". Seems consistent with "they want to carry on showing off their rep". – Graham Lee Dec 17 '10 at 13:40
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@GrahamLee, As a member of the community yes. That's separate from mod actions. – Rebecca Chernoff Dec 17 '10 at 13:42

Would it be better if moderators didn't gain/lose reputation for their questions and answers?

I actually think it would be much worse, just because you are a moderator, does not mean you do not get a "kick" out of being upvoted and having lots of numbers below your name.

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I think it would be worse.

In addition to what Michael Mrozek mentioned in his answer, I would also mention the following:

This creates a separation between users and mods. According to the A Theory of Moderation blog post, moderators are human exception handlers, but still a part of the community.

As a moderator, your actions now represent the community, so you will be held to a higher standard of behavior. You are an ambassador of trust, with the same sorts of rights that the official development team and community coordinators have.

As a moderator, your answer is no more correct than anyone else's. Representing the community doesn't mean that you are more knowledgeable than the community. A change like this has the potential to give that impression. You aren't asking / answersing questions as a mod, you are doing that as a member of the community.

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This is really the only answer. Moderators are, more than anything else, part of the community. Otherwise, we (SO, Inc.) would just moderator all the site ourselves. – Robert Cartaino Dec 16 '10 at 1:44

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