Mureinik's Answers
- A user with less than 2,000 rep is on an edit spree, changing nothing more in all the posts they're editing than one or two small word(s), and their edit is either incomplete or is not an improvement of the post each time. They're up to 45 similar/identical edits in the course of an hour, and a majority of these are being approved by reviewers that aren't paying attention. How do you handle this editor and the reviewers? How would you handle a similar situation with a user who has full editing privileges?
There are several issues here. The user suggesting these edits is obviously doing something "wrong", or at least something that doesn't align with the spirit of suggesting edits. At best, he's just misunderstanding the spirit of suggesting edits, and how they are supposed to improve the site. At worst, he's attempting to game the system for an easy reputation gain, two points at a time. My initial gut reaction is to give people the benefit of the doubt and not to assume nefarious motives where lack of understanding could explain the situation just as easily. I'd start with pinging that user by commenting on one of those posts with a message in this spirit:
Hey [name]. You seem to have made several minor edits during the last hour. As noted in the help center, Tiny, trivial edits are discouraged - try to make the post significantly better when you edit, correcting all problems that you observe.
If this behavior still persists after such a notice, I believe a moderator can impose an edit ban, and if that doesn't work either, longer or wider bans could be employed.
With regard to the edits already made, I'm a firm believer that actions should be judged by their own merit, not by whoever performed them. A minor edit that doesn't correct all the problems in a post but is still correct still improves the post - I wouldn't touch it. In fact, I'd probably complete the editing task on that post to show a better example. Any edit that actually makes the post worse, I'd revert.
With regard to these post's reviewers - again, my guideline is giving people the benefit of the doubt. Everyone can make a mistake, or several, or even full-heartedly approve such an edit due to his own belief it was a good edit. However, if I see a pattern of the same user(s) approving multiple edits, I'd leave a note on one of those edited posts. If this bad behavior persists, I'd consider a temporary ban from reviewing.
The second case of a user having more than 2K reputation is more interesting. On the one hand, such a user has less to gain from such behavior, except for perhaps chasing the Editor/Strunk & White/Copy Editor badges. On the other hand, with more than 2K reputation, such a user should have a pretty good idea of how editing is supposed to work. I'd still leave him a message, but would be much more inclined to revert his edits and/or edit ban him.
- A user flags (as low quality or NAA) an answer that consists of only code -- no explanation, no references, just code. On the one hand, the answer is (1) correct and (2) self-explanatory to an experienced user of the language/tool in question. On the other hand, it's possibly meaningless to the OP. Do you delete the answer?
This obviously depends on the answer itself, and my own level of understanding in the subject matter, but as a general sentiment - no. This doesn't sound like a [very] low quality answer - while this answer may not be useful to the OP, it may very well be useful to future readers with a slightly higher level of proficiency in the language/tool. I would however comment and ask the author to elaborate a bit:
@name while this answer seems correct and may be self explanatory to a reader with good knowledge of [subject], it would be significantly better if you explained the problem in the OP's code and how your code fixes that issue.
Regardless, I'd mark the flag as helpful. Despite not triggering the deletion of the answer, this is the kind of behavior you'd want a mod to be aware of, and I prefer it if the potential flaggers err to the side of caution.
- Do you have any Meta posts that you're particularly proud of, or that you feel best demonstrate your moderation style?
Admittedly, I haven't been too active on Meta. I don't know if "proud" is the right word, but I especially enjoyed sharing my my story in the 10M question thread. I have a couple of answers (1, 2) that express some of my thoughts about SO and about moderation - the way the site's mechanics can and should be used to encourage the behavior we'd like to see, and moreover, my belief that communication is key, and you should assume users act as they act due to misunderstandings, not malice, until proved otherwise.
- 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?
I'm a firm believer in the Be nice rule. A "steady stream of valuable answers" is definitely positive, but not at the cost of making other users feel unncomfortable or unwelcome. Like with any other user, I'd delete the belatedly offensive comments, and issue a warning. If the same user continues with this behavior, banning, although it's an extreme measure, is always an option.
- How would you handle a situation where another mod closed/deleted/etc a question that you feel shouldn't have been?
First, I think that a bit of disagreement is a good thing. We aren't robots, and all the mods were elected, by part, due to their views of how moderation should be done. These disagreements are an important opportunity to exchange ideas and learn from each other, so I'd try to understand why he/she handled the situation the way he/she did, and try to explain why I'd have handled it differently. Having said that, it's important to display a unified message, so users don't get the feeling that behaving in a certain way is OK during specific hours when mod X is active, or on a specific topic when mod Y focuses his attention - so I'd try to have this discussion in some private medium between the two of us, or within the moderators group. I'm not quite sure about the technicalities of such a medium, having never been a mod before, but I'm sure one exists.
- A user flags a post or comment as rude or offensive to a minority group, or as a member of a minority group. You know little about the issues facing this minority group and the post would not be offensive to the majority of users. What do you do?
Delete it, upfront. And if such a transgression occurs, ban the offender. Besides the general guideline to "be nice", such offenses of this kind are especially unacceptable, as they criticize the poster, not the post. A comment like "this is a horrible solution because of XYZ" may be harsh, and depending on the wording even inappropriate, but it's essence still deals with the issues we all came here to discuss - coding. The fact that the poster belongs to any nationality, religious group, gender, sexual orientation, etc. has nothing to do with the quality of his posts. The fact that someone attempted to make him feel unwelcome because of such an affiliation is, in my opinion, inexcusable.
- A question is asked and receives some very good answers. The asker then flags this question and asks for it to be deleted because having it up will cause them trouble at work or school. Do you delete the question?
Generally speaking, no. Although I've advocated giving people the benefit of the doubt throughout this answer, I must admit that such behavior strikes me as dishonest. I find it hard to believe that someone honestly didn't understand what harm a post could cause them, and only realizing it after his question got answered. Regardless, SO doesn't aim to answer questions just for the benefit of whoever asked them, but to be a useful source of information. Once the asker put his question out there, he lost any ownership over it he may have had.
Having said that, I think that there are several reasonable exceptions. First, I would definitely help the asker edit/modify the question to remove personal or corporate information that isn't crucial to the question. Second, if leaving the question up will expose SO to any legal liability (e.g., publishing copyrighted materials), I'd definitely help removing it, or at least editing it so the issue is defused.
- Being a moderator you will able to close questions on your own and override other community votes. Will this change how you vote to close questions? More? Less?
Both, surprisingly enough. First, I'd put in more effort closing questions I feel 100% confident of closing (not that I haven't been doing so so far, with more than 11K close votes and 4K deletion votes). Mods are given their extra privileges due to the community's vote of confidence that they will use them wisely, for the greater good. Not to use them would be an abuse of this trust.
On the other hand, I'd be more hesitant with questions I'm not 100% sure about. I sometimes encounter a question that I'm not 100% sure should be closed. I usually wouldn't mind casting the first or second close vote on such a question just to get the ball rolling, since this close vote will essentially be peer-reviewed, and if I'm misguided, this closure vote should ultimately be rejected. As a mod, you don't have such a privilege - your close vote is immediate, and requires no coalition, so I'd think long and hard before closing a question I'm not sure about.
- If you could add/revise one Stack Overflow policy/guideline, what would you change? Why would you change it, and what would it mean for the community?
The one policy that always bugged me was the 60 day limit on migrations. As the Stack Exchange network grows and add more sites, more and more questions seem to have a better place than SO. Two notable examples are Database Administrators that was launched several years after SO and Open Source that just recently launched its public beta.
The way I see it, the questions (and more importantly - the answers!) in SO don't exist only to help the original asker, but as a (hopefully) searchable knowledge base that future users can use as a reference. And where would we want to direct people looking for answers on database administration? Here, or to a specific site dedicated for such questions?
This should obviously be done carefully. For example, we shouldn't penalize users for asking or answering questions on database administration here before there was a dedicated site for it by removing their points when the question is migrated. But implementation details aside, I really see no point in this question "ageism". If a question is better suited to a site other than SO, it should be migrated there, regardless if it's sixty seconds old, sixty days old, or sixty months old.
- Will you be willing to moderate the chatrooms? Right now, Jon Clements is the only moderator who actively moderates chat. He's done some great work there already, but he can't babysit us 24/7. In the past few months, there have been a number of trolls who abuse flags, stars, and other worst of all - other members.
Obviously, chat is secondary to the main site. But we'd certainly appreciate some additional help over there. Room owners are actually quite powerless in most situations. And I'm sure Jon would appreciate some rest from time to time.
Frankly, I'm not an avid chat user, but sure - it should come with the territory. You can't be a moderator by only moderating the parts you enjoy and ignore the parts you don't like.