The vast majority of time in my room - everything is fine and no action is required. However, occasionally there's a bad apple that disrupts my room in one way or another.
What can I do about this?
The vast majority of time in my room - everything is fine and no action is required. However, occasionally there's a bad apple that disrupts my room in one way or another.
What can I do about this?
There's a general (although not strict - and depending on severity) scale of things that can be done.
If you ARE an owner of that room:
If you're NOT an owner of that room:
Moderation inside of chat is very important to keeping the room "livable". This can kind of go both ways though, as chat rooms are very open to interpretation. So long as nothing too egregious is taking place, and the room is active and somewhat related to the exchange, the room will remain.
If the goal is to have an anything goes room then moderation is probably not of much concern. However, if the goal is to have a nice on topic room then there are some simple steps that can be taken to sort of cultivate the culture there.
Keep in mind that this is all still up to the room's discretion, and that depending on that room enforcement or formality will vary greatly.
These steps are basically in order of importance.
Have an easily accessible set of rules
This is very important. Having a set of rules for the room allows users (new or not) to be aware of what is expected inside of the chat room. It also provides some documentation to point to when actual action needs to be taken be it a friendly reminder or something more elevated. For example, I maintain this site: csharpchat.com and am one of the room "owners" of the c# room (feel free to stop by).
Assume good faith
The chat feature is not widely understood by new users, especially users who are also new to Stack Overflow itself. They tend to wander in and expect that it is just some sort of feed or place to post and then move on. This is because they are often unfamiliar with how immediate the system here works. Often their first interactions seem brash or callous and it is important to at least give them a chance to remedy their behavior before taking action against them. However, as each room is different, your mileage may very here. For example, the JavaScript room gets so much traffic that they often do not have enough time to allow a constant stream of brash or callous users to get accustomed to the room.
Give direct warnings
Once the rules are expected to be read and are available, and good faith has been exhausted, then the user needs to be made aware of the situation. A direct message to them is usually all that is required requesting that they stop whatever undesirable behavior their are doing - even if it is once depending on the type of behavior. For example
@user - Do not direct profanity at other users.
@user - Avoid posting NSFW content.
@user - You will be removed from the room if you continue your behavior.
Migrate content
"binning" content is common in chat rooms. It has no negative consequence towards the user who had their content binned. This is a feature only available to room owners, and can be used by clicking the popout menu under room↓ and then selecting "move messages".
At which point another popout appears with a "move messages" button.
Hovering any message will show a large plus as the cursor which indicates that this message will be added to the migration list. Selecting a message (you can hold down ctrl and click to select multiple messages at once) will highlight it blue and once all of the messages are selected you may choose "move messages". This will allow you search for a room to migrate the content to (please do not send it to other legitimate rooms). Select the trash can or bin and the undesirable messages will be removed and you will automatically send a message to the room indicating the migration.
The moved messages won't be found in the transcript either.
Kick-mute the user
If the rules are in place, and a warning was issued, and they press on, then it is time to remove them from the room. They are removed for 1 minute, then 5 minutes, then 30 minutes, and if it gets past the 30 minute point a moderator gets involved. More on kick-muting from @balpha. This avenue should be semi last resort, but it is a useful tool to use. I have found it useful to also send a message to the room indicating that I removed the user for the explicit reason so that it is obvious what happened from their perspective and as a courtesy to other users in the room.
Flag for a moderator
This is the last resort. This is for a user who is so egregious that simply kicking them is not enough. I have only found this useful in one occasion in 3 years which is to say that it doesn't get much use. Selecting the drop down arrow near a user's message ("message actions") will give the option at the bottom "flag for moderator" which opens a small dialogue that a custom message can be described in. This should not be used often at all, and the kick-mute feature does a very good job of making the moderation flag obsolete.
Flag a message as "spam, inappropriate, or offensive"
Don't do this. It is in my opinion a mostly broken feature. This will send a popup alert to every 10k user across chat to review the message flagged. However, as each room has its own topicality and culture, most of these users do not need to see this content. It is often dismissed without action and used for comments which could have been dealt with in the other steps already listed. Please avoid flagging content.