I've been answering questions on-line for about twenty-five years. Transitioning from CompuServe forums, to newsgroups when Microsoft decided to give up its forums, then to MSDN, before landing here. (And I came here because the Microsoft Devs for Office said this is where they'd be, not MSDN, because it's "where devs want to be". I found this rather off-putting, considering MSDN was/is "theirs", but managed to make the transition, anyway.)
So change, disappointment and adjustment aren't new to me. Neither is the reason for what I do: help people understand the software they're dealing with and, at the same time, learn new things, myself.
And also work in a "community" of similarly oriented professionals. For more than twenty years, that was the Microsoft MVP program. Just over a year ago, I (and many others) were not renewed, not because we failed to help people, but because Microsoft decided that it wanted to recognize only "cloud-oriented" people. (Next disappointment...)
Luckily, by that time I had found a "home" on SO. After dealing with newsgroups (utter wild West chaos, no moderation) and MSDN forums (little quality control beyond removing spam and moving off-topic messages), SO was a very welcome change.
It still continues to be a much more "comfortable working environment" than any other I've experienced. (CompuServe was well-moderated, but the interface available back then was no comparison to what we have nowadays.)
Despite everything, the "powers" haven't shut down Meta, haven't gotten rid of "chat", and still tolerate (if not directly encourage) community among its users. Things could be worse.
It's too bad that there's not more interaction with the company. But this is also something I've been through as part of the MVP program. Things might get better... or might not. The initial tensions I experienced were on Stack Overflow, specifically. Now the eye of the storm has moved, more generally, to other areas of the site, especially Meta SE, while on the SO public-facing side (I don't know about the moderator area) things are quiet and generally productive. The feeling in The Meta Room (chat) is generally forward-looking in respect to SO and supportive.
The fears that the site will open up completely (no quality standards) I believe to be incorrect. Coming from the background I have, supporting "newbies" to coding is nothing new, as long as we're not expected to write entire projects or tutorials (not the case!).
So I currently have no plans to change what I do on the public-facing side.
I had been considering running for moderator at some point, but if an election were to run right now, I would not nominate myself, not knowing what the interaction and relationship with The Company would be.
As for moderation activities, using the tools available to the user community, I continue to do so as time allows. Moderating the site is to the benefit of us, all, who continue to use it.