While I applaud the excellent work of all our community moderators, the question has come up:

How long will be the elected moderator’s “mandate”? Is it for life, or are we going to have “moderator elections” regularly?

Of course, any community moderator who wishes to recuse him or herself can certainly do that at any time.

  • Should we have term limits that require community moderators be cycled out periodically, so others get a chance to moderate?
  • Should we hold regular (say, yearly) moderator elections?
  • Is it better to have a larger pool of community moderators, and let the normal ebb and flow of turnover get us "natural" variability in moderation?

What are your thoughts on this?

link|improve this question

30% accept rate
21  
Why when I hear "moderator for life" do I do think it's going to end in someone being stabbed to death on the Senate floor? Will we one day miss the old republic? :) – cletus Jun 30 '09 at 8:57
3  
Stabbed to death is fine - if a moderator consistently engages in gross malpractice they can be booted but a fixed term and re-election process would encourage populist moderators. – ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells Jun 30 '09 at 9:46
I do think there should be some kind of probation period for newly elected moderators... at the end of which they need to be approved by their peers. – Benjol Jan 19 '11 at 7:35
I'm telling you, man... recall elections. (Never mind that that was posted under the "suggest an April Fool's joke" question.) – Popular Demand May 20 '11 at 14:33
feedback

12 Answers

up vote 35 down vote accepted

Yeah, It should be 'for life'. I think this because:

  • You would be effectively kicking out experienced moderators.

  • It would also mean that the moderating 'team' is split once a year. Which is also undesirable.

  • Moderating is pretty much the same person to person. Someone who is competent will not be too different from someone else who is competent. It's not like you can have different policies for which users can vote. The job is simply to enforce the terms and conditions of the site and some maintenance/tidying up.

  • Although Stack Overflow is meant to be community driven I am not sure on the idea on them worrying about community approval. Sometimes, not often though, it may be their job to be unpopular (say, closing a popular but wildly off-topic question).

Ultimately I see little to gain in moderator elections. If any moderator is bad/abuses their position then I imagine they would be kicked out by the SO Team anyway!.

I think regular elections for new moderators is fine, but I don't see why existing ones should be up for re-election and maybe booted out.

Finally you should consider that generally elections are useful in deciding the direction of the community. This is not that. These are people who follow the policy and decisions decided by the SO team and the community. They are civil servants, not politicians.

link|improve this answer
17  
+1 - for worrying about community approval. A term and re-election system would encourage populist moderators which is not a good thing. Judges are given life appointments in judicial systems precisely so that they cannot be manipulated by political pressure. For sure, boot any moderator who engages in consistent malpractice but don't set up a moderation system that rewards populism. – ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells Jun 30 '09 at 9:36
-1: Populism is not nessasirly a bad thing, and we have Royalty to overrule the masses if the populus gets out of hand. While judges may be for life in some places, they elected in others. And I see the role of moderators as more of a law enforcement roll, like a sheriff. – Stu Thompson Jun 30 '09 at 10:14
7  
It's not Populism I am worried about, it's the fact moderators may be worried about community approval in a way which effects their ability to do the job. The added dimension of elections would, in however small a way, introduce a unwelcome angle of politics to SO. – Damien Jun 30 '09 at 10:29
4  
That's exactly the failure mode of populism. A populist will worry about their public image as they moderate, particularly if they have to remain popular in order to get re-elected. Someone with tenure does not have to worry about this, and management in the form of Jeff et. al. is still available to deal with moderator malpractice. I probably needed to be more specifc about the meaning of 'populist' as I used it in this context. – ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells Jun 30 '09 at 14:14
feedback

I'd say "for life unless they misbehave or become inactive".

If the site grows quickly we may need to have elections periodically to create more moderators anyway, of course - but I'd say we should keep trusting existing moderators unless we have a reason not to.

I'd be concerned about a moderator who didn't log in for a month, and obviously any examples of abuse of power need to be taken seriously, but other than that I think it's best to let them get on with their "job".

link|improve this answer
feedback

Throw the bums out!

(I jest.)

Me thoughts:

  • At least a regular election/selection would be nice. Once a year maybe? Just because a moderator's "term" is up doesn't mean they won't be renewed. We won't necessarily be loosing experience.
  • Furthermore, being a moderator is not a bucket full of roses. There is a degree of responsibility involved that can wear on folks, and makes them a target of abuse. No need to run them into the ground. It can also rot the soul, leading to a sense of entitlement. Yes, J&J can boot them, but this is a destructive process.
  • Stack Overflow is by its nature very democratic. Having sheriffs for life does not continue that democratic philosophy.
  • Being a community moderator is a growth experience for many folks, and I think it would be best for more people to hold the position over time. This would be good for the newly appointed moderators, SO itself, and the wider community.

(I assume a fixed/defined number of ♦ moderators will be determined by the SO team and adjusted as they see fit.)

link|improve this answer
1  
+1, as I believe what you're saying is that terms is better than life. I think that's what you're saying, at least. I think it would be great as a sort of MVP for SO users. MVPs are chosen from the community and, I'm pretty sure, are not lifetime positions. – Won't Oct 4 '10 at 15:49
feedback

I always liked the ways Slashdot did it. Moderation abilities are something that you earn and that you have to keep earning. So someone who stays away for a month might lose his/her mod status.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Should we have term limits that require community moderators be cycled out periodically, so others get a chance to moderate?

No, experience is key here.

Should we hold regular (say, yearly) moderator elections?

This should be done as the community grows. There should be some number to go by. Like at n number of questions / answers per day you need y mods.

Is it better to have a larger pool of community moderators, and let the normal ebb and flow of turnover get us "natural" variability in moderation?

If you are referring to 10k mods. Then I think it's good to have a large pool of them, since usually there are a lot of minor fixes they can do. And when the community grows, the number of 10k mods should grow as well.

link|improve this answer
1  
I like the "grow ♦ moderators as questions/comments rise" idea. – Stu Thompson Jun 30 '09 at 10:17
feedback

Life Sentence ?

  1. Moderator for life ends up in an autocracy, a dictatorship without benevolence. Power goes to people's heads. They quickly become completely unaware they they have some personal bias against or for someone or other, and that they are no longer moderating. Besides, which sane person really wants to be a mod on SO for life.

    • if someone's contribution needs to be recognised above all others, fair enough, give them an honorary title for life; but it is honorary, absent of power and responsibility.

Policing the Police

  1. The point is, moderators need to be moderated. All their actions and interactions need to be transparent. Like any good police force in a free country. We are only as sick as our secrets. If there is no higher authority, people quickly deteriorate into tyrants. Therefore all the mods should be able to police any other mod.

    • once a dispute or personality issue is flagged, then the mod should voluntarily give up handling the complainant (and thus retain credibility and integrity), or the other mods take the issue off them (and thus they learn something).

    • absence of this structure means the moderator become site owner, StackOverflow becomes the highest ranking moderator.

    • if it is a community, then the community has to police the police. Failing to do so very quickly ends up in a police state. Lack of transparency defines a police state.

  2. Of course it is a learning experience. Moderators are going to make mistakes. Let them be corrected, by the other (uninvolved) moderators, it is the only way to grow. People are here for their contribution to the community, not for personal power.

    • But it needs to be recognised that people are people, and their personal and power issues will come to the fore when they are given positions of power.

    • Power corrupts. Absolute power corrupts absolutely. Lord (Baron) Acton.

    • Again (1) is essential.

Terms [of Reference]

Therefore terms, and a healthy pool of enthusiatic moderators, is the only way to go.

  1. Elections appear to be the accepted form here, so that is fine. Splits and competition then have to be accepted as a part of the election process. Mature people will be less split, and less personally involved, and therefore post-election can continue to work with others. Immature people will learn.

  2. I think six months is too short. One year is minimum. Three years is probably too long for people to commit to (and when they commit, they have to commit to the duty and responsibility of the role, not the power of the position). Two years would be the best; it gives people time to mend their post-election fences, and get their personalities out of the way.

  3. The pool has to be large enough so that no one or few people carry an unbalanced workload.

  4. The pool has to cross enough time zones to be effectively and immediate in their actions.

  5. It also has to have enough range; junior mods through senior mods. In order to cultivate senior mods for the long term.

  6. Given that it is a community, the health of the moderator community depends on them exercising and enjoying a real community. Which means no hierarchies. Rank, yes, reputation, yes; but no hierarchies. Hierarchies lead directly to dictatorships.

  7. And gender balance. Ok, the industry is not gender balanced, but we have to have better gender balance than the industry. Women add value that men cannot understand or identify. They will make mistakes too, the amazons and school marms will get weeded out in one term, just like the stalins.

  8. To be clear, I am saying moderators should be elected on the basis of merit, not popularity, but SO does not have a system for tracking merit; popularity is all we have. Far more prone to problems people have identified in other answers, but there is no alternative.

Related

One related issue is the FAQ, while I love the short and sweet nature, it is too short and sweet. That leads to each moderator having their own (personal) interpretation of it. Which often results in different mods have drastically different interpretations, and applications thereof. It also results in substantial waste of time and energy arguing definitions of what "be nice" and "be honest" is, all of which can be avoided. Therefore I think the FAQ need to be fleshed out just a bit more.

  • A law cannot be relied upon unless it is stated in definitive terms, and it is applied the same to everyone. Otherwise it is a fish that slides around, and it loses its value. the result is not dictatorship but fiefdoms of warlords.

Cheers

link|improve this answer
2  
Ehrm, concerning power going to moderators' head: link or it didn't happen... :) – Benjol Jan 19 '11 at 7:34
feedback

Moderation should primarily be a meritocracy as quality of work is more useful than popularity of the work. Democracy is secondary to that - it is peripherally useful in that public opinion of the merits of a particular individual may be correlated with their actual merits. However recent history is littered with examples where this was not the case.

Also, public opinion can be manipulated by people with access to mass media - which can undermine the democratic process by skewing public opinion with incomplete or biased information or outright propoganda.

link|improve this answer
feedback

A benevolent dictatorship is always better than democracy.

May I suggest however, moderators should be:

  1. Distributed evenly through time zones - no point having 80% in the US etc.
  2. A range of "specialties", this may involve for example "Objective-C only shortlist"
  3. Some women - it's a real sausage-fest round here. Seriously, I'd support a "women only short list" for the next moderator.
link|improve this answer
3  
Time Zones is a good idea. I don't think they need specific domain logic? Their job is to moderate. Not verify content. That's what the community is for. – Damien Jun 30 '09 at 11:16
1  
I refer you to an old podcast - (I think) Jeff said (and I'm para-phrasing) a C# guy might be more generous to C# questions [subconsciously] so it's good to have a mix. – rjstelling Jun 30 '09 at 11:18
4  
#3 sounds like affirmative action... – George Stocker Jun 30 '09 at 13:00
1  
Nothing wrong with that, a few women moderators would help increase the total number of women users - then you don't have to worry about it. – rjstelling Jun 30 '09 at 13:06
4  
Regarding geographic distribution, I was curious so I created a map of the SO moderators given their location in their profile: google.com/maps/…. As you can see ~85% are in the US (two are even in the same city!) but there's a pretty good spread among the timezones. Some east Asian moderators ought to cover the gap. – Kyle Cronin Jul 1 '09 at 1:24
Can has Australian modz now? – Sam152 Jan 15 '10 at 11:11
+1 for time zones, thought that's difficult to guarantee with elections. – Benjol Jan 19 '11 at 7:31
feedback

An experienced moderator is a good moderator. If they do a good job keep them as long as they wish.

link|improve this answer
3  
Regular elections would not necessarily mean the loss of experienced moderators. – Stu Thompson Jun 30 '09 at 10:14
The question was "for life" or "cycle periodically". I vote "till death". – Ladybug Killer Jun 30 '09 at 10:47
Very binary of you :P The question is multifaceted, and the issue open to debate. Shades of gray. Analog. Other options exist than just 'cycle' or 'till death'. – Stu Thompson Jun 30 '09 at 11:18
Well, first of all, I've never written, that I am against elections. Many of the actual moderators were elected. Second, if one was elected I vote "for death", not kicking him out just because to give others a chance. No, tell me, where is the shade? – Ladybug Killer Jun 30 '09 at 11:25
1) I never said you were against elections. 2) Your comment "The question was..." above is both binary/shadeless and inaccurate. – Stu Thompson Jun 30 '09 at 11:35
feedback

Definitely don't force them out. Maybe regular elections (6-monthly?), but perhaps even that isn't needed. The downside of "for life" is that unless there is a turnover, when some moderators do then leave, you've suddenly got (perhaps multiple) inexperienced moderators. I'd say leave things as they are for the next 12 months and review things then - I can't see anything going too badly wrong before then!

link|improve this answer
feedback

Rather than term limits, I think it would make much more sense to have annual elections in which existing mods need to be re-elected.

This would give mods a chance to reflect on whether they want to keep serving the community, and it would also give the community more voice. Right now, there is very little that forces mods to take account of what the userbase wants. It would probably be better if there were an opportunity for the community to review their behaviour annually.

link|improve this answer
To the contrary, the fact that you can still post an opinion on this topic nearly two years after the question is posed is a testament to the openness of the community feedback process. There are limits to that openness, however. If the peasants want to burn down the castle, chances are good we're not going to allow that, no matter how popular the idea might seem at the time. – Robert Harvey May 20 '11 at 14:35
Also, the policies that are followed by the moderators today are, in large part, established by this community process. So you can't really say that the desires of the community are not taken into account. – Robert Harvey May 20 '11 at 14:39
1  
@Robert Harvey: There's a big difference between merely being heard, and having the chance to review the performance and execution of moderators. – Marcin May 20 '11 at 14:45
Ah. For more on that topic, see here: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/90677/… – Robert Harvey May 20 '11 at 14:48
Right, but annual re-election is a totally different beast from meta-moderation. Each has their strengths and weaknesses, but significantly the problems and advantages don't overlap (beyond community control of the moderators). – Marcin May 20 '11 at 14:52
If the point here is to make moderators really consider if they want to continue to serve via some token of effort to continue, that happens much more than once a year. Every action we take is open and can be readily disputed via a variety of mechanisms - defending your self is an emotionally and time expensive proposition - learning from that is equally if not more taxing. Fragmenting the team on an annual basis would mean teaching everyone how to do what we do within the policy we enforce, which would be even more taxing. I'm sorry, but -1 to this. – Tim Post May 20 '11 at 19:41
2  
@Tim: I don't see why an annual election would lead to fragmentation of the team. If the moderators have the confidence of the community there would be no reason why they could remain indefinitely if they wanted. As to "every decision" making you consider whether you want to continue - I'm sure you realise that there is a difference between something you have to do every day, and something that occurs annually. Maybe you feel challenged every day, but I bet you don't reflect on every decision and see it as an opportunity to gracefully withdraw. – Marcin May 20 '11 at 21:48
feedback

I think at least one new moderator should be elected each year. In the event that we then get too many moderators one long serving moderator should be chosen at random to be removed.

We need new blood to be coming in, but as long as a site is grow fast I don’t think we need to get rid of the old blood.

link|improve this answer
1  
So far there has never been more than a nine-month gap between new rounds of moderators (May '09 - January '10 - July '10 - January '11), so I think we're doing okay on that score. – mmyers May 20 '11 at 15:11
feedback

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged