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Magisch
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I'd imagine something that does not rely on individual mods making editorial choices would be prudent, something like

a post that has

  • x many votes (maybe a net score of +5 or so?)
  • y many views (maybe 40-45 or so?)
  • z many featured flags (maybe at least 2 or 3?)

gets to be featured for either

  • x fixed time (maybe a flat week to weed out unequal attention due to activity windows?)
  • until superseded by another post in the y slots (seem to be 5 slots presently, reduced by blog posts and featured MSE posts)
  • for at least x time and then when superseded by another post in the y slots. (maybe for at least 3-4 days, or 4-5 days when featured on a weekend)

Obviously, the moderators can and should still exercise discretion and disallow obvious gaming of the new rules, but I think that it would be a tall order to ask our moderators to exercise full editorial control over the content of featured meta posts.

Not only would it break one of the oldest paradigms of SE moderation, namely that moderators do not need subject matter expertise, but it would open them up to all sorts of criticism and accusations of bias. I'm sure they get enough of these as is without us further fueling the fire. The more concrete and less subjective the policy for featured tag use becomes, the less attack surface is created to attack the moderator team.

I'd imagine something that does not rely on individual mods making editorial choices would be prudent, something like

a post that has

  • x many votes
  • y many views
  • z many featured flags

gets to be featured for either

  • x fixed time
  • until superseded by another post in the y slots
  • for at least x time and then when superseded by another post in the y slots.

Obviously, the moderators can and should still exercise discretion and disallow obvious gaming of the new rules, but I think that it would be a tall order to ask our moderators to exercise full editorial control over the content of featured meta posts.

Not only would it break one of the oldest paradigms of SE moderation, namely that moderators do not need subject matter expertise, but it would open them up to all sorts of criticism and accusations of bias. I'm sure they get enough of these as is without us further fueling the fire. The more concrete and less subjective the policy for featured tag use becomes, the less attack surface is created to attack the moderator team.

I'd imagine something that does not rely on individual mods making editorial choices would be prudent, something like

a post that has

  • x many votes (maybe a net score of +5 or so?)
  • y many views (maybe 40-45 or so?)
  • z many featured flags (maybe at least 2 or 3?)

gets to be featured for either

  • x fixed time (maybe a flat week to weed out unequal attention due to activity windows?)
  • until superseded by another post in the y slots (seem to be 5 slots presently, reduced by blog posts and featured MSE posts)
  • for at least x time and then when superseded by another post in the y slots. (maybe for at least 3-4 days, or 4-5 days when featured on a weekend)

Obviously, the moderators can and should still exercise discretion and disallow obvious gaming of the new rules, but I think that it would be a tall order to ask our moderators to exercise full editorial control over the content of featured meta posts.

Not only would it break one of the oldest paradigms of SE moderation, namely that moderators do not need subject matter expertise, but it would open them up to all sorts of criticism and accusations of bias. I'm sure they get enough of these as is without us further fueling the fire. The more concrete and less subjective the policy for featured tag use becomes, the less attack surface is created to attack the moderator team.

Source Link
Magisch
  • 7.3k
  • 34
  • 179
  • 252

I'd imagine something that does not rely on individual mods making editorial choices would be prudent, something like

a post that has

  • x many votes
  • y many views
  • z many featured flags

gets to be featured for either

  • x fixed time
  • until superseded by another post in the y slots
  • for at least x time and then when superseded by another post in the y slots.

Obviously, the moderators can and should still exercise discretion and disallow obvious gaming of the new rules, but I think that it would be a tall order to ask our moderators to exercise full editorial control over the content of featured meta posts.

Not only would it break one of the oldest paradigms of SE moderation, namely that moderators do not need subject matter expertise, but it would open them up to all sorts of criticism and accusations of bias. I'm sure they get enough of these as is without us further fueling the fire. The more concrete and less subjective the policy for featured tag use becomes, the less attack surface is created to attack the moderator team.