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  1. Before elected mod, you used to hang out in one of the SE chat rooms and continue to do so after being elected (ok, not so active as before, your new duties and adjusting to them take some of your time now). You consider "regulars" there to be your friends. One of them has the habit of posting witty/snarky comments under SO questions and re-posting them in the chat room - for your friends' notice, and sometimes amusement. The comments are not inherently bad, on the contrary they are often pointing on the questions' misconceptions or lack of useful info. But they can be taken as snark and are sometimes flagged.

    Before elected mod, you used to hang out in one of the SE chat rooms and continue to do so after being elected (ok, not so active as before, your new duties and adjusting to them take some of your time now). You consider "regulars" there to be your friends. One of them has the habit of posting witty/snarky comments under SO questions and re-posting them in the chat room - for your friends' notice, and sometimes amusement. The comments are not inherently bad, on the contrary they are often pointing on the questions' misconceptions or lack of useful info. But they can be taken as snark and are sometimes flagged.

    First, what do you do, what action do you take if any? Second, do you tell, announce to your friend and others what you did? If they have their comments repeatedly deleted, they will notice of course, but they will not know who did, only guess, probably. The point of this second part is not only whether and how your friendship will affect your actions but how you will deal with the consequences of your actions and the effects of them to your friendship.

First, what do you do, what action do you take if any? Second, do you tell, announce to your friend and others what you did? If they have their comments repeatedly deleted, they will notice of course, but they will not know who did, only guess, probably. The point of this second part is not only whether and how your friendship will affect your actions but how you will deal with the consequences of your actions and the effects of them to your friendship.
  1. Before elected mod, you used to hang out in one of the SE chat rooms and continue to do so after being elected (ok, not so active as before, your new duties and adjusting to them take some of your time now). You consider "regulars" there to be your friends. One of them has the habit of posting witty/snarky comments under SO questions and re-posting them in the chat room - for your friends' notice, and sometimes amusement. The comments are not inherently bad, on the contrary they are often pointing on the questions' misconceptions or lack of useful info. But they can be taken as snark and are sometimes flagged.
First, what do you do, what action do you take if any? Second, do you tell, announce to your friend and others what you did? If they have their comments repeatedly deleted, they will notice of course, but they will not know who did, only guess, probably. The point of this second part is not only whether and how your friendship will affect your actions but how you will deal with the consequences of your actions and the effects of them to your friendship.
  1. Before elected mod, you used to hang out in one of the SE chat rooms and continue to do so after being elected (ok, not so active as before, your new duties and adjusting to them take some of your time now). You consider "regulars" there to be your friends. One of them has the habit of posting witty/snarky comments under SO questions and re-posting them in the chat room - for your friends' notice, and sometimes amusement. The comments are not inherently bad, on the contrary they are often pointing on the questions' misconceptions or lack of useful info. But they can be taken as snark and are sometimes flagged.

    First, what do you do, what action do you take if any? Second, do you tell, announce to your friend and others what you did? If they have their comments repeatedly deleted, they will notice of course, but they will not know who did, only guess, probably. The point of this second part is not only whether and how your friendship will affect your actions but how you will deal with the consequences of your actions and the effects of them to your friendship.

replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
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decezedeceze's answers

Surely such things never happen! :-O
  
Well, okay, unfortunately they do. The first step here is obviously to try to talk to the person in question and point out that their behaviour is uncalled for. Ideally it'd be possible to talk the person down back to a normal behaviour. Everyone can blow a gasket every once in a while; it's unfortunate if it happens in public, but that's life.

Every superhero needs an archenemy, don't they? ;)
  
As long as it's harmless quips, I've got a pretty thick skin. If it starts getting disruptive... you may have noticed that I'm a fan of trying to talk it out, so that'd be a first step. There's nothing much to be done really beyond that if it stays at a personal level and has no broader consequence to the community as a whole. You can't be liked by everybody equally.

An answer is clearly not an answer if it's gibberish, contains no content once any links have been removed or is clearly something other than an answer (spam, a new question, feedback etc.). The general criteria can be found here: http://stackoverflow.com/help/deleted-answershttps://stackoverflow.com/help/deleted-answers

deceze's answers

Surely such things never happen! :-O
  Well, okay, unfortunately they do. The first step here is obviously to try to talk to the person in question and point out that their behaviour is uncalled for. Ideally it'd be possible to talk the person down back to a normal behaviour. Everyone can blow a gasket every once in a while; it's unfortunate if it happens in public, but that's life.

Every superhero needs an archenemy, don't they? ;)
  As long as it's harmless quips, I've got a pretty thick skin. If it starts getting disruptive... you may have noticed that I'm a fan of trying to talk it out, so that'd be a first step. There's nothing much to be done really beyond that if it stays at a personal level and has no broader consequence to the community as a whole. You can't be liked by everybody equally.

An answer is clearly not an answer if it's gibberish, contains no content once any links have been removed or is clearly something other than an answer (spam, a new question, feedback etc.). The general criteria can be found here: http://stackoverflow.com/help/deleted-answers

deceze's answers

Surely such things never happen! :-O 
Well, okay, unfortunately they do. The first step here is obviously to try to talk to the person in question and point out that their behaviour is uncalled for. Ideally it'd be possible to talk the person down back to a normal behaviour. Everyone can blow a gasket every once in a while; it's unfortunate if it happens in public, but that's life.

Every superhero needs an archenemy, don't they? ;) 
As long as it's harmless quips, I've got a pretty thick skin. If it starts getting disruptive... you may have noticed that I'm a fan of trying to talk it out, so that'd be a first step. There's nothing much to be done really beyond that if it stays at a personal level and has no broader consequence to the community as a whole. You can't be liked by everybody equally.

An answer is clearly not an answer if it's gibberish, contains no content once any links have been removed or is clearly something other than an answer (spam, a new question, feedback etc.). The general criteria can be found here: https://stackoverflow.com/help/deleted-answers

deleted 1 character in body
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deceze Mod
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I am not particularly power hungry and didn't particularly covet the position of a moderator as such. My personal life was also fraud with international household moves, babies born, work to do... as such I wasn't particularly keen on taking on even more tasks. However, turns out, I'm on SO a lot anyway, and I'm mostly closing questions and leaving meta comments and flags. And I'm getting very little flackflak back, so it appears I must be doing something right. It's actually gotten to a point where not having moderator tools feels inefficient sometimes. Personal and work lives have stabilised, so... might as well.

I am not particularly power hungry and didn't particularly covet the position of a moderator as such. My personal life was also fraud with international household moves, babies born, work to do... as such I wasn't particularly keen on taking on even more tasks. However, turns out, I'm on SO a lot anyway, and I'm mostly closing questions and leaving meta comments and flags. And I'm getting very little flack back, so it appears I must be doing something right. It's actually gotten to a point where not having moderator tools feels inefficient sometimes. Personal and work lives have stabilised, so... might as well.

I am not particularly power hungry and didn't particularly covet the position of a moderator as such. My personal life was also fraud with international household moves, babies born, work to do... as such I wasn't particularly keen on taking on even more tasks. However, turns out, I'm on SO a lot anyway, and I'm mostly closing questions and leaving meta comments and flags. And I'm getting very little flak back, so it appears I must be doing something right. It's actually gotten to a point where not having moderator tools feels inefficient sometimes. Personal and work lives have stabilised, so... might as well.

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deceze Mod
  • 520.6k
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  • 142
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deceze Mod
  • 520.6k
  • 26
  • 141
  • 142
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