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Sabito
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moderation of any questions living within a collective

I think there is a misunderstanding of what a collective is. From what I understood, they are not closed-off spaces, they don't have their "own" set of questions. (And I hope it stays like that).

The questions are still just normal questions on StackOverflowStack Overflow. They have "sponsored tags" on them, and they might be featured in one (or multiple?) collectives, but that's about it.

And so the community still decides on what questions are on-topic, and moderates them accordingly. Sure, there might be friction on the question of what should be on-topic, but if anything, more moderation by the community can help to enforce our standards. Letting collectives moderate themselves would only lead to diverging standards and communities - where the rules "within a collective" are "a bit different". This might happen anyway, but only if the collective members put in some effort on their own, earning the right to moderate their space, not by just paying for it.

moderation of any questions living within a collective

I think there is a misunderstanding of what a collective is. From what I understood, they are not closed-off spaces, they don't have their "own" set of questions. (And I hope it stays like that).

The questions are still just normal questions on StackOverflow. They have "sponsored tags" on them, and they might be featured in one (or multiple?) collectives, but that's about it.

And so the community still decides on what questions are on-topic, and moderates them accordingly. Sure, there might be friction on the question what should be on-topic, but if anything, more moderation by the community can help to enforce our standards. Letting collectives moderate themselves would only lead to diverging standards and communities - where the rules "within a collective" are "a bit different". This might happen anyway, but only if the collective members put in some effort on their own, earning the right to moderate their space, not by just paying for it.

moderation of any questions living within a collective

I think there is a misunderstanding of what a collective is. From what I understood, they are not closed-off spaces, they don't have their "own" set of questions. (And I hope it stays like that).

The questions are still just normal questions on Stack Overflow. They have "sponsored tags" on them, and they might be featured in one (or multiple?) collectives, but that's about it.

And so the community still decides on what questions are on-topic and moderates them accordingly. Sure, there might be friction on the question of what should be on-topic, but if anything, more moderation by the community can help to enforce our standards. Letting collectives moderate themselves would only lead to diverging standards and communities - where the rules "within a collective" are "a bit different". This might happen anyway, but only if the collective members put in some effort on their own, earning the right to moderate their space, not by just paying for it.

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Bergi
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moderation of any questions living within a collective

I think there is a misunderstanding of what a collective is. From what I understood, they are not closed-off spaces, they don't have their "own" set of questions. (And I hope it stays like that).

The questions are still just normal questions on StackOverflow. They have "sponsored tags" on them, and they might be featured in one (or multiple?) collectives, but that's about it.

And so the community still decides on what questions are on-topic, and moderates them accordingly. Sure, there might be friction on the question what should be on-topic, but if anything, more moderation by the community can help to enforce our standards. Letting collectives moderate themselves would only lead to diverging standards and communities - where the rules "within a collective" are "a bit different". This might happen anyway, but only if the collective members put in some effort on their own, earning the right to moderate their space, not by just paying for it.