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Aug 11, 2017 at 20:28 comment added peterh @Servy I think in the case of the SO you may have right. It is still 2.5 times bigger as the other sites summed together (in the sense of new posts/month), while it has a maybe a tenth mods as the other sites summed together. I think the SO mods may be really busy, compared to the other sites. I think, the number of the mods should be proportional to the site activity (≈ new posts/month), but the mods should be so few as possible, but they should be enough to have time for the mod-only tasks.
Aug 11, 2017 at 20:12 comment added Servy @peterh So SO went from being thousands of mods short of having enough mods to moderate all of the content to thousands minus 5. They still have nowhere near enough moderators to actually moderate everything, and when you actually look at moderation actions performed on the site by moderators and non-moderators, the moderators are dwarfed by orders of magnitudes. The SO mods don't even manage to get through the moderator only issues (i.e. mod flags) effectively, let alone handling all of the community moderation for them.
Aug 11, 2017 at 20:08 comment added peterh @Servy The SO is roughly constant (in the sense new post/month) since roughly 2014, while the number of the mods doubled since 2014. Even knowing, that the old mods tend to be lesser active, why would it mean that their relative weight in the decisions isn't heavier? On the end of this way, we will get a Wikipedia No2.
Aug 11, 2017 at 19:54 comment added Servy @peterh On smaller sites, perhaps, on SO, that's just not even possible, even if SO wanted to.
Aug 11, 2017 at 19:52 comment added peterh @Servy Btw, in the last years a lot of mod elections happened, without the proportional growth of their sites. I think, the SE internally switched its focus from the community moderation to grow up an army of moderators in a short leash, without sharing this with the community. For example, on the ServerFault, mainly the mods are doing even the VtC/VtR work and the community self-regulation is only nominal. In my opinion, it is another step back to the old-style ircchannel/newsgroup/wikipedia era, to the single-person decisions instead community self-government.
Aug 11, 2017 at 19:46 comment added peterh @Servy The results to me, that the delete votes are practically unusable without some "semi-official" cooperation between the delete voters. In the case of the undelete votes, it may be interesting that it could help to fix falsely deleted posts (actually, I only got to 3k+ because I wanted to fix the numerous, well... unwise close/reopen decisions). But, first it requires the double of the already wasted effort to get to 10k+, and second, also it has the disadvantage of the lack of organized work of the post deletions.
Aug 11, 2017 at 19:43 comment added peterh @Servy I've thought already a lot on it. Voting to delete is not very worthy to me, if I voted to down, with others together, it will be likely deleted. Voting to undelete would be useful, but it requires 20k (while already 10k is too big). Some "delete/undelete review queue" doesn't exist. Which results, if I voted to delete something, the delete vote will stay there forever (as far I know, they don't timeout), and the post will be only deleted after also a lot of other 10k+/20k+ found the post, accidentally (because also they can't list/search them), and voted to delete it.
Aug 11, 2017 at 19:36 comment added peterh @Makoto But it is only my personal flavor, as I can see, most of us are focused to a single SE site (like you), cross-site SE users like me are rare (which is harder, although it has nice features: one gets more often some "surprise" (like a review ban for a year, or any similar), but it affects the overall cross-network privileges much lesser. Had I done my whole activity only on 1 or 2 SE sites, maybe I had got to 10k+ already on them (my overall rep is roughly 30k, but I have no 10k anywhere).
Aug 11, 2017 at 19:36 comment added Makoto Well...that's what the privilege is set to. If you have a gripe with that, then you should post a feature request explaining and justifying why it should be lowered.
Aug 11, 2017 at 19:36 comment added Servy @peterh 10k isn't just the ability to view deleted posts, it's also the ability to vote to delete (certain) posts (and undelete them).
Aug 11, 2017 at 19:33 comment added peterh @Makoto Getting to 10k+ only for that? To see sometimes some trash? No, it is a false treasure. It doesn't worth its price. To me, after 3k+, there is no more privilege which would worth the effort, thus the advancement is over. At least, on a single site. Although it could be interesting and useful to get to 3k+ on other sites. If the deleted posts would be visible roughly from 5k+ (as the 10k+ can do now), and they would be searchable from 10k+, including deleted comment access (as the mods can do it now), I would work for it.
Aug 11, 2017 at 19:25 comment added Makoto You can see your own deleted posts...if you can see deleted posts in general. Nothing wrong with gating that behind the 10K privilege, since seeing deleted votes in general is a 10K+ rep level thing anyway.
Aug 11, 2017 at 19:23 comment added peterh @Makoto Ok. Specifically about the deleted post access: not seeing them, not even your own ones, is a very annoying thing, despite that their majority is obviously crap. In the rare cases as they were deleted on some exceptional reason (for example, by accidentally disclosing special personal data), they should have been really deleted (i.e. by DELETE on the SQL level). In my opinion, making this to such a privilege, is a mistake from the SE policy-makers: 1) it makes a "hidden treasure" from a pile of crap 2) it makes the post-deleters unaccountable.
Aug 11, 2017 at 19:06 comment added Makoto Maybe, but I'd rather leave that sort of mentorship and leave the sort of power that entails to the users that actually invest lots of time there. Having a breadth of knowledge helps when knowing where to ask and answer specific questions. Having a depth of experience is important when dealing with community moderation, which is what most of the privileges being requested are for.
Aug 11, 2017 at 19:05 comment added peterh @Makoto No. It wouldn't be a reason to even register the site, even if I would have 3 10k+ account (now I have 0). Although I like and honor the language and Japan, I think my life is already too short to start to learn it. But, for example, seeing your 500+ on 3 different sites makes me thinking, you could pretty well advice newbies also on the SuperUser, despite that you have only 170 there now.
Aug 11, 2017 at 16:19 comment added Makoto Why would you want to see deleted posts on Japanese Language? What value are they to you if you just had some confusion on how a sentence was structured?
Aug 11, 2017 at 11:58 history edited peterh CC BY-SA 3.0
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Aug 11, 2017 at 11:52 history answered peterh CC BY-SA 3.0