This is an attempt at an MSO proposed-faq to detail what options rooms have to keep their room free of unwelcome content/users. All input welcome.
Introduction
The vast majority of time in my room - everything is fine and no action is required. However, occasionally there's a bad apple that disrupts amy room in one way or another.
So what can I do about the bad apples?
There's a general (although not strict - and depending on severity) scale of things that can be done.
- Inform the user - as politely as possible (but in no uncertain terms) - their message/behaviour is not acceptable - hopefully this will be enough and all can continue amicably.
- If the user is cross-posting blatant spam/offensive messages to multiple rooms (that you notice) - flag a message by that user as spam/offensive.
If you ARE an owner of that room:
- Move any unsuitable messages to the bin if not wanted in the transcript
- If the user persists or has crossed a certain limit (as per your room rules/culture) then kick the user (this gives them a little cool off period to contemplate) - this will remove the user from your room and suspend from chat for 1 minute (1st kick), 5 minutes (2nd kick) and 30mins (third kick); note that three kicks in 24 hours will raise a moderator flag to prevent abuse of the feature/alert mods of a potentially deeper issue.
- If they still haven't taken this on board and keep returning as a bad apple - then flag one of their posts for a moderator who will be able to look into the bigger picture and take appropriate action.
If you're NOT an owner of that room:What can I do about this?
- Allow a few moments for a room owner to take action - they're the people that shape a room's policy and culture - so give them a moment to decide what action they wish to take (if any - what you might be uncomfortable with could well be "fine" for that room).
- If nothing happens after a reasonable time and you still see spam/offensive messages - then raise a spam/offensive flag - this allows 10k+ users across the chat network to see potential issues.