Stack Overflow, due to its size, has some unique problems. One of those is flags. For example, in the last 30 days as of the time I am writing this, there have been 26,710 flags. That is 890 flags per day on average.
One of the primary duties of a community moderator is to look at and process flags, as noted in the theory of moderation blog post:
Even with active community self-regulation, moderators occasionally need to intervene. Moderators are human exception handlers, there to deal with those (hopefully rare) exceptional conditions that should not normally happen, but when they do, they can bring your entire community to a screaming halt — if you don’t have human exception handling in place.
The most common moderator task is to follow up on flagged posts. Every post contains a small flag link, which anyone with 15 reputation can use.
Flags are good. Flags help us maintain Stack Overflow and improve it. But there are so many of them. If you do the math, and assume each flag takes about one minute to look at, load the page, and decide (probably an optimistic number), that is 890 minutes of work per day -- almost fifteen hours in total.
In addition to using every clever trick in the book we can think of to expedite and automate flag handling, we've continually been expanding the number of community moderators on Stack Overflow to help share the work of handling this tide of flags:
- July 2010: Will, Michael Myers
- Feb 2011: SLaks, Robert Harvey, Tim Post
- May 2011: Lasse, Kev
- November 2011: Adam Lear, BoltClock, casperOne, NullUserException
- June 2012: Brad Larson, ThiefMaster, George Stocker
- Spring 2013: Andrew Barber, Flexo, Gordon, ChrisF
Note: This list only reflects the results of the moderator election at that time, they are not indicative of who is currently a moderator of the site
As of now we have sixteen community moderators, visible on the /users page of Stack Overflow.
Of course, serving as an elected community moderator is, and always will be, a completely voluntary at-will activity. But I believe the sheer scale of Stack Overflow now demands some additional policies specific to Stack Overflow community moderators.
We are not asking anyone to make special accommodations, but it is increasingly untenable for us to have elected moderators who spend substantial amounts of time on Stack Overflow, but do not participate in the primary duty of a moderator -- that is, helping us follow up on and resolve flags from Stack Overflow users. It's unfair to the other elected moderators, and it is unfair to the community.
Just as in open source, "many hands make light work", but this requires each of the moderators to be truly pitching in and contributing by resolving flags by clicking that bright orange number periodically throughout the day.
We are of course open to adding more community moderators. But that is avoiding the issue.
I believe we regrettably must have a new, specific policy for community moderators on Stack Overflow, due to its size and scale: I propose that on Stack Overflow, all elected community moderators must close a 'reasonable' number of flags while they are on the site. If they do not, they cannot continue to hold the position of Stack Overflow community moderator.
"Reasonable" is of course To Be Determined, and the point of this is not to demand specific numbers -- all we're looking for is a fair and equitable balance of flag handling among community moderators over a period of 2-3 months.
Comments? Opinions? Thoughts?
If they do not, they cannot continue to hold the position of Stack Overflow community moderator.
in the question above - which implies discharging is being considered. And I can only assume 2 will be determined by the "performance chart" on the history page, but I think that is the real point being asked here.