- The general atmosphere amongst the moderators is currently not the sweetest. A lot of them have resigned due to the issues on the site in the past year, and many others have significantly reduced their activity. COVID-19 has put pressure on our real lives, which is dragging the remaining ones down. The flag queue has been increasing, and has been higher than what it used to be in the past couple of years. In these testing times, what would you do to bring back happiness in the community, and motivate them to do more moderation tasks? Do you think you have the mettle to handle these gloomy situations, and help the Stack Overflow community bounce back on the moderation front?
This question is both asking an implicit "how do you think you can improve morale among moderators to improve their motivation to work the flag queue" and the explicit question about how to motivate the community to do more moderation.
For both situations, one of the more important things is to be an example of the behavior you desire to see. So, me putting out the effort and being present to do the tasks, is, of course, very important.
Beyond that, there are literally hundreds, if not thousands, of books devoted to team dynamics, much of which can be applicable to the community at large. So, a comprehensive answer to this question is way too much for this questionnaire.
However, for the other moderators, I'd begin by listening to their concerns, including those beyond the world-global and community-global issues of which we are all aware.
For both the moderator team and community, one of the typical ways to restore morale is for the group to establish for itself smaller/closer targets which are both beneficial and can be accomplished with relative ease and a high probability of success. Once one is complete, you can build on that success with the next task, also selected by the group to be likely to produce a positive result.
For the moderators, I don't have enough information about the moderator team, as a team, to make a specific suggestion, nor do I know what, if anything, has already been tried. Tossing out suggestions without knowing more could easily be counterproductive. I'd also point out that I'm nominating myself to be a member of the moderator team, not to come in and be its savior or leader.
For the community, the organized moderation projects have typically been burninations. Those could be started up again, beginning with some tags with not that many questions. Doing so could get more people interested in doing moderation tasks and give some successes, which people can feel good about.
- With all of the drama that has happened on the site in the last few months, why do you still want to run? What is it that drives you? What motivates you to still want to serve the community in good faith given your efforts will almost always go unnoticed, and that the folks you think have your back may at any point turn against you?
For me, a large part of what drives me is service and duty to others. I've always been that way. So, the short answer to "why do you still want to run?" is that I desire to help the community. Being a moderator is the most effective way for me to do that.
Personally, I found the issues with Stack Exchange over the last year to be very demotivating with respect to the company, but I always felt the urge to help the people in the community. I did contemplate discontinuing my efforts here, but continued to put in large amounts of time and effort, because the people: the community; the other moderators, both elected and those doing user-level moderation; and the greater community we help by building this repository of questions and answers, are what matter to me, rather than the company.
There was a period of months last year during which my answer to "do you want be a moderator?" would have been "no, thank you", or some much stronger negative statement. However, we've seen the company turn things around to a significant extent, even if there have been some stumbles along the way.
At this point, I believe the company really is working to change, and that we should work with them to help make that change stick.
- A high rep user of the site has started to link their own library in many of their answers. Tipped off by a flag, you see that they are overtly self promoting themselves, and handle it by deleting their answers and sending them a mod message asking them to update their answers and provide affiliation. The user is arguably furious after reading your message. They then post their own version of the story on meta without giving much information, and cite that you deleted all their answers. The meta crowd, who is half informed about the situation has brought out all pitchforks, as a high rep user has been contacted. What do you do here to de-escalate the increased tensions?
I would write up an answer to the meta question explaining the accurate details of what happened (to the level to which it's permitted to share). Doing so will allow people on meta see a more accurate picture of the situation. I'd explain in the answer how the user was violating our self-promotion guidelines and that the user's answers were deleted only until such time as the user modifies their answers to fit within the guidelines. I'd provide explanation/responses to people who have further comments and issues. Most such situations can be deescalated by providing a clearer picture of what happened, and reinforcing to the OP that there is a path to their answers being undeleted, which also allows them to make further contributions.
For the future, I'd work on the wording of the initial message to the user. It's quite likely a situation similar to what instigated this scenario will happen in the future, which will require a similar message. While such messages need to communicate the requirements, they should, ideally, do that in a way that doesn't escalate the situation. While there's no message which will prevent every person from being upset over the situation, it's likely the text used could make it less likely that a user will be furious.
Additionally, do you feel that high rep users must be given more leeway than low rep users, or should the law be the same for all?
The policies and guidelines apply equally to all users. Everyone must interact with Stack Overflow in compliance with them.
Within the context of this question (i.e. posts being spam because of the user linking to their own content without disclosing their affiliation, or over promoting), users with other beneficial contributions (even if that user is a 1 rep user, but with some other constructive questions and/or answers that are not linking to their own content) are given a bit more leeway than users with no contributions other than those promoting their site/product/library/etc. The leeway given is in additional time to edit their posts, or the moderator spending more time editing disclosure into the posts for them.
The reason for this is that the user has a track record of the type of behavior we want to see here on Stack Overflow. It's human nature to trust someone more when that person has a history of doing things you want to see done. You trust them to be more likely to continue to do the things you think are good. You trust more that when they do things that are not appropriate, that such things are more likely to be a mistake, or that the person is more likely to return to doing things appropriately with a little guidance.
Regardless of that extra leeway, it doesn't mean that users with substantial contributions don't have to comply with the policies and guidelines on the site.
- How aware are you of the controversial events on the network from Q3-4 last year? Assuming you are aware, what makes you still feel you wish to nominate now? Show us you know exactly what you are doing when you are running in this election. In particular, moderators are (should be) representatives of the community and its best interests, not the company. How can you find balance in representing what is the best for community and at the same time avoid conflicting the company to the point where the company may decide to remove your privileges?
I'm very aware of what happened last year. However, the only post I made about one of the issues was just prior to the major blow-up surrounding Monica. My answer focused on a technical/legal aspect, rather than the human side of the plethora of issues. I read all of the posts that were involved, including all answers on the questions, and left comments on a reasonable number of them. I did not write another answer, because by the time I would see the next new question/chapter, there were already answers which voiced positions very similar to what I would have said. Just piling on and posting yet another answer saying basically the same thing would not have been productive.
There is no one answer to finding balance between representing the community while not dramatically conflicting with the company. The priority is that a moderator's job includes representing the community. Doing that while not generating dramatic conflict with the company is a matter of interpersonal relationships. I consider myself fairly good at conflict resolution and avoiding unnecessary escalation, while still reaching a resolution that's acceptable to the parties involved. How, exactly, to do that is much too broad of a topic for an answer to this questionnaire. In general, doing so routinely involves listening to the concerns of the other side; putting yourself in their position, in order to understand how things look from their point of view; and working to find a resolution that is mutually acceptable.
The company appears to have been on the path towards changing for a while now. At this point, I feel it's reasonable to be giving the company the chance to do so.
[Note: Well, OK, I should be more accurate and say I spent a huge amount of time reading a large number of questions and their answers on MSO, MSE, and other site specific Metas. I believe I read the significant majority of posts involved, but I don't think anyone can accurately say they read all of them.]
- Here are two questions but you only need to answer one. It is about how you would interact on Meta.
- Your candidate score is > 20
Stack Overflow is moving into a new era with the next generation of developers / engineers / enthusiasts emerging. As you have a high candidate score you have been here long enough to not remember what it was like when you started here as a user (things changed, okay?). Why do you think you are the right person to guide / understand / support the upcoming community that is so much different with different needs and a different attitude? Please elaborate.
I feel the contributions of new users are as important as the contributions we get from our established users. While there may be aspects of my learning about interacting with the site which I've forgotten, I usually find it's very easy to mentally put myself in other people's position in order to explore their point of view and understand them better. In fact, looking at a problem from the other person's point of view is an ingrained part of how I approach issues.
While good contributions should be encouraged from all users, and newer users guided towards positive contributions, that doesn't mean we should drop our standards of quality. The end result of dispensing with our standards of quality is the eventual death of Stack Overflow, as it becomes increasingly difficult to get the problem solutions which are the primary thing people come here for.
- A user has replied to an increasingly heated comment chain and used an ambiguous yet colloquial word that can be gender neutral to many people, but carries an implicit male context by itself ("dude", "guys", etc.). This comment draws a few red flags, including a custom moderator flag that accuses the person of violating the pronoun code of conduct. There's nothing else flag-worthy about the comment. How would you handle this?
From the description, this appears to be a case where the user was not trolling. While I would keep the possibility in mind that it might have been trolling, I'm answering this from the point of view implied in the question, which is that the user's use of gendered colloquial language was done without knowing how the use of those terms isn't inclusive.
It's likely that a large portion of the "increasingly heated comment chain" has little or no value to be retained. So, clean up the comments as much as reasonable, including the one which was getting flags. Allow the involved users to cool down.
As to the implicitly gendered speech: Assume good faith from the user; communicate with them; direct them to resources explaining the issues surrounding such speech; suggest that they be more careful in their choice of wording. Make a note that they have been made aware of the the issues.
- There have been several unpopular features lately, changes in moderation policy
forced prompted by SE, and a promise by the company (I am not stating this promise has been kept.) to listen to feedback from the community. Given this I have a two-part question (with the second part being the more important part in my view):
- What do you think a moderator's role should be when an unpopular feature is rolled out by SE?
- What would you, as a moderator, do when faced with a controversial decision announced by the company, one which you personally disagreed with, and felt was bad for the community at large?
Moderators have at least as much voice as any other user, but shouldn't use their position to artificially incite more conflict between the community and the company. Moderators can, and do, post about the issues surrounding the new feature on MSO and MSE. Moderators also have a bit more access to staff and might be able to discuss it with them in a venue which was not so emotionally charged as Meta sometimes becomes.
In general, use the available communication channels to communicate to the company that there are significant issues with what happened and that a different direction would be better. So far, the Meta process and chats between users have seemed to be effective in the new company environment.
- How would you deal with a user who produced a steady stream of valuable answers, but tends to generate a large number of arguments/flags from comments?
The goal is to get the user to change the part of their behavior which is disruptive. There's a process for this: begin with communication: explain what's inappropriate; suggest ways the user could act which will generate better outcomes. If the user doesn't change their behavior, then a series of increasingly severe sanctions can be imposed, until such time as the behavior changes. If the user is unwilling/able to change, then they may end up suspended for a significant amount of time.
- Do you see moderators as a cooperating team or as a collection of individuals with the "nuke" button? (Note: "nuke" is used as a general term here, referring to the fact that all actions by a moderator are binding and take effect immediately.)
I see the moderators as a team. A group of people is usually significantly more effective if they act in ways that complement each other's strengths, rather than at cross-purposes, or even just independently.
How would you handle a situation where another moderator closed/deleted/etc. a question that you feel shouldn't have been?
Discuss it with them, so we reach mutual agreement as to what to do.
Could you be convinced by fellow moderators to revert one of your
moderating decisions (delete/close/undelete/reopen/suspend/unsuspend)?
Of course, I could be convinced that an action I took was inappropriate, or even just not the best solution. If so, take responsibility for my actions; change/correct what was done as much as possible; if it caused harm, apologize and make amends to the extent possible/reasonable; and learn from the experience, so it doesn't happen again.
- Given the trials and tribulations that Stack Overflow is facing—not just with some high profile departures from Stack Overflow moderation—what makes you believe that you'll be motivated and capable of handling the many responsibilities of moderation?
I have a long history of sticking with things once I commit to them, particularly when they involve a duty or service to others. I find it hard to believe that I wouldn't treat the responsibility of being a moderator similarly, even if it became unpleasant. I also have a strong tendency to put in more time and effort than is strictly required. Given that I'm around SO/SE quite a bit, it would take considerable effort for me to not do moderation work.
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