Some time ago I was approached by a moderator for a perfectly valid reason, but the way it was done left me rather bewildered. Up to this day I have no idea what to make of it and whether it's possible to make such encounters more productive. So I decided to ask.
I don't know whether it's forbidden to publish moderators' mail, so I will make the quoting as short as possible.
Let me introduce myself first. I spend a lot of time trying to make Stack Overflow and PHP community a better place. I take pride in writing answers like this and articles like this, trying to divert the tide of bad practices that floods the Stack Overflow and PHP ecosystem in general.
- I am trying to write answers that would be not only helpful for the particular person who asked, but for everyone who would stumble upon such a problem in the future (it is not as obvious as it seems; most answers turn to be too localized).
- I am trying to write answers that are looking one move forward and offer some ways to solve a problem, not just acknowledge it.
- I am trying to write answers that ensure that no another problem will be introduced while solving the initial issue (to be honest, the way questions are usually answered is a real plague in this regard. For example, almost every answer regarding the SQL syntax issue introduces an SQL injection, and so on).
My comments are usually helpful as well, though sometimes I am not willing to go into much detail explaining why some suggestion from a random passer by makes absolutely no sense to say the least.
This is what I usually do on Stack Overflow. Nobody ever contacted me in regard of this devoted service. Of course it is not that I am asking for it. Just for a comparison.
Don't get me wrong, I am not trying to praise myself. I only want to explain that I don't sit all day round on Stack Overflow harassing people and writing useless comments.
Of course I am not a saint. Sometimes I am getting drawn up into an unnecessary conversation. It seldom happens, but we all have bad days (especially given the overall quality of an average contribution, be it a question, or an answer or a comment - man, it takes a lot of gut to stand all that muddy stream). I acknowledge this problem's existence and would gladly accept any help in this regard.
And then I get this modmail that basically asked me to be "extremely careful with my comments" and intimated that moderators are "discussing a year-long ban" if I won't improve. Boy, it was a shock.
I do believe that such an approach is not helpful for two reasons
- general overreaction and hostility. A year-long ban for a few chatty comments? Seriously?
- general "unhelpfulness". Seriously, how one is supposed to learn about their mistakes from a suggestion like this: "comments that didn't provide any clear guidance, didn't move the conversation forward and didn't help the poster in any way". Such a phrasing is so overly-polite and circuitous that one hardly can make any use of it. Am I supposed to scrutinize my recent comments to see what did I done wrong? That's quite a tedious task, especially given that comments in question are likely got deleted.
What I would suggest is to make moderator mails less formal. For example, adding examples of one's misbehavior would help a lot. I know sometimes it's hard to find a good example that is not in the grey zone and thus could be contested and moderators are not willing to be drawn into an argument, but still. Show me where I slipped up. Give me a hand.