Update:
I've toned down the language in the title and the body of this post. You can see the original in the edit history, if desired, and there are references to it in the comments. The original wording was a reflection of my exasperation, but it was needlessly incendiary - my apologies.
Perhaps needless to say, it is my perception that what occurred constitutes a personal attack, but I invite you to see for yourself.
To be clear:
What this post is not about:
Discussing the merits of improving the existing mechanism for encouraging new user to "do the right thing" - to me, this is well worth discussing, but separately.
- Update: More specifically, this post was therefore also never about discussing the behavior that led to the moderator warning.
Identifying a particular member of the moderator team (my original attempt to ask them to identify themselves in a private exchange notwithstanding).
Having a respectful disagreement, including the choice to exit a conversation - which, needless to say, is perfectly acceptable.
What this post is about:
Sparing other users the treatment described below.
Ensuring accountability in private conversations with users.
I received a private message from the Stack Overflow Moderation Team containing what I presume to be a form letter (canned message) asking me not to use comments to ask users to accept answers. (Even if it wasn't a form letter, it was a calmly worded message that made specific points, some of which I disputed in my response).
I wrote a response, which can be summarized as follows (but I invite you to study the transcript to see if this summary is apt):
I agreed to stop posting these comments, because I agree that the guidance my comments were meant to provide are better provided by a mechanism built into the site.
Fair enough, I'll stop
The following thoughts were - literally - labeled asides, because I was cognizant that it was a separate discussion:
I explained my motivation for posting these comments.
I voiced my concerns about characterizing whether users should accept answers as "completely optional" vs. voluntary with a view toward guiding them to the behavior that benefits the community at large.
I stated that I was unaware that a mechanism already existed (I've never seen it) and that, given my experience with the results of posting my comments, the existing mechanism strikes me as inadequate, and inquired whether improvements were underway.
In short: it was an invitation to reach a shared understanding about how (new) users should be guided toward behavior that benefits the community as a whole (whether or not the exchange at hand was the right place to continue this discussion is irrelevant).
The (non-canned) response that followed I can only describe as a mixture of the following, in no particular order:
assumptions of ill intent
speculation about motivation
casting aspersions
gratuitous threats [update: a repeat warning was justified, given that I didn't make it clear enough that I would comply; even so, the wording strikes me as incendiary]
A few quotes (again, I invite you to study the transcript):
You've been around long enough (...)
Stop trying to bring it back. [I had no idea what I was trying to "bring back", and certainly didn't ask for it]
Frankly, reading your reply to this message gives the impression that you have developed quite some entitlement complex
that just solidifies our concerns about you bullying users
Further comments of that kind will be deleted upon sight, with no notification, and may lead to sanctions against your account.
In short: a personal attack, with no accountability (no response was received after my calling for accountability).
Update: On further reflection, I realize I must show accountability myself:
- My first response was not as neutral as I believed it to be, so I can now see my part in this escalation - see my answer for details.
Transcript:
For the record: here's the - non-public - link to the original exchange: https://stackoverflow.com/users/message/86591
Publicly viewable copy:
https://i.sstatic.net/VE1Rr.png