Obviously moderators are a big part of this community. I'm not saying they're the core - because in my opinion the hierarchy should be
- the people who ask the questions (without them there would be NO SO)
- the people who answer and/or help out and then
- the moderators
Nonetheless, it seems that the latter are usually the ones who spend a significant amount of time on the site. I just read the current election and from what I understand you need to be on the site daily for at least 30 minutes or so and have a long standing reputation etc etc.
Now - who pays for all of this? Because SO is a FOR-PROFIT organization. There are banners on the site, SO actively tries to sell to organizations that have an interested in products related to the topics on SO etc etc.
So my argument is this: SO makes money from the activities that moderators help with. Shouldn't they be compensated other than by getting badges?
Also - I know from close-up experience that a lot of IT people are on SO during office hours. And not to ask questions, but to ANSWER them. So effectively stealing time (and money) from their employers. Do we honestly believe that those employers / companies gain more from SO than they lose by having those people on SO? Of course the same argument can be made for facebook / twitter and what not, but it seems in this case the brain drain is more related to their actual job.
Thoughts?
EDIT - 7 minutes into the question I already have 7 downvotes so the consensus is there, but I'd still like to hear arguments (like Martijn's).
Research says the following (see this PDF):
But we obtain the puzzling result that, when rewarded, volunteers work less.