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Early this morning, a regular in the C# chat room posted a crude but inoffensive message wishing everyone a happy Friday. The message wasn't hostile to anyone, it was however flagged as offensive. Due to this a moderator came in and banned the user for one hour. This was not well met by the C# room regulars, which are generally liberal with their language. The room culture generally does not flag or punish profanity as long as it is not hostile or directed at anyone. The room owners will also generally move offensive and NSFW to the trashcan and offenders will be warned. Subsequent behavior will still be moved to the trashcan and the offender is kick-muted. I myself have posted offensive messages and been warned fairly quickly by the RO's.

The events this morning unfortunately led to a conflagration of drama. There were provocative statements from a few room regulars, however this eventually died down to users questioning the Mod's decision. The questioning generally followed the opinion "If the profanity is not intended to hurt anyone's feelings, who cares?". This led to a heated debate between several room members and the mod. The mod issued a final statement that generally amounted to "I will not tolerate rude or offensive content in this room". It was shortly after this statement that the mod locked the room. To many, it appeared that the mod locked it out of being questioned by the users, not due to vulgarity (which had by and large died down at this point).

Several room members would like clarification on why the room was locked, as well as whether moderation was based on personal preference or not. I know that in a community that is managed by autonomous and independent individuals that not all moderation decisions will always be equal, and that not all will agree with a moderators decision. To that reason the room regulars feel like it should be discussed why the room was locked. It also follows that perhaps room culture should be respected in decisions of moderation. No active chat users felt it was offensive, the present room owners argued that the language was normal for the culture of the room, no hostility was directed at another user. For this reason I also feel that room culture should be respected as long as self moderation occurs. Generally when a mod attempts to moderate without taking culture and context into consideration, his/her actions are taken as offensive themselves, and are met with a backlash. This leads to more drama and hurt feelings than the original message would have.

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    Just because the room's culture is more lax doesn't mean it doesn't have to conform to the general SO culture. And even if no offense is meant doesn't mean that something isn't offensive.
    – ryanyuyu
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 16:54
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    The fact the the room culture allows profanity does not make it okay. All rooms are public and anyone can lurk/be active in them. If you post something that offends them they have the right to flag that. From be nice: Inappropriate language or attention. Avoid vulgar terms and anything sexually suggestive. Also, this is not a dating site. Commented May 20, 2016 at 16:59
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    I'm confused. Why does everyone keep thinking that Chat is somehow not held to the same standards as the rest of the site?
    – Makoto
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 17:00
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    @Makoto because half of the moderators say it's not and even swear in the rooms with us, and the other half do not. We need a more specific guideline when moderating our own chat rooms. What is vulgar to you, may not be vulgar to somebody else. To some, something as simple as saying they had a shitty day is vulgar. To others, it's not. Including moderators. as we can see from their sometimes inconsistent enforcing of rules. Not their fault, they don't have specific guidelines either. Commented May 20, 2016 at 17:03
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    "... when a mod attempts to moderate without taking culture and context into consideration..." If your comments are offensive to people who don't have the culture/context, then they are not appropriate for SO. Most moderators, like the vast majority of users on the site, will not know the culture of a chat room before entering, and they shouldn't have to. Somebody seeking to talk about C# shouldn't encounter a wall of profanity, regardless of how well you think it fits the "culture" of the chat room.
    – user229044 Mod
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 17:15
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    @Waterseas: A spam/offensive chat flag can only have one of two possible outcomes: 1) invalid/not sure, nothing happens 2) valid, user gets suspended. There's no middle ground here, for better or for worse.
    – BoltClock Mod
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 17:21
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    @MartinJames That sounds like a good way to concentrate the nastiness.
    – Undo Mod
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 17:22
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    @MartinJames Because we still have the site rules and policies. Chat is not exempt. A lot of things get a pass but when checking if something is right or wrong we still have to abide by them. If swearing isn't allowed on main then it is also not allowed in chat. Commented May 20, 2016 at 17:24
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    @MartinJames "If you don't like it, ignore it" is hardly an appropriate attitude for any part of Stack Overflow. This is a moderated community. It has a target audience of professionals and serious amateurs and the way we communicate here should reflect this. There are lots of places on the Internet which aren't moderated where you can go and behave however you'd like.
    – user229044 Mod
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 17:27
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    @MartinJames You're not being asked to care, mind. You're being politely asked to recognise that you don't get to decide — Stack Staff get to decide, and have. Anyone is free to refuse that request and not recognise that reality, but that probably won't lead to positive outcomes. Commented May 20, 2016 at 17:32
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    @tweray It's an undue burden on mods to have every mod action result in being dogpiled. If people object to moderation, contacting the Community Managers is the official means of appealing the decision. Freezing a room to put an end to objections that the mod doesn't have a couple hours to respond to is pretty reasonable, when an official appeals process is available. Commented May 20, 2016 at 17:35
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    @tweray So, if the mod is telling you "if it CAN be seen as vulgar, a flag on it means it'll get removed" What is there to "disagree" with? I,m sorry, it's a moderator telling you how the site is run.... you just go with it. Also, considering I saw a chat message from you saying "It'll only draw more attention to this room" which REALLY sounds like "we're going against the site rules AND WE KNOW IT, and we don't want to be seen".... All in all, it seems... toxic a bit.
    – Patrice
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 17:37
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    @tweray I've seen the transcript. Moderating real-time chat is hard, and it's often best for everyone to just stop talking while we pick up the pieces. There isn't a perfect solution here, but I support TheLostMind's decision here.
    – Undo Mod
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 17:41
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    @tweray so, you're aware you are a user here, and that the site is stack? There is nothing to agree or disagree. The guideline is CLEAR "BE NICE". This is "don't be vulgar to outside users". You arguing "I do not find this offensive" has no ground here. If that's the only argument that was going around, I understand why the room was frozen. Mods have better things to do than argue for hours over what "vulgar" is. By definition, if SOMEONE flagged it as vulgar, for all intents and purposes, it is vulgar. You can argue this for months, it won't change.
    – Patrice
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 17:52
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    @tweray yeah, and in that same discussion, I can say "I love giraffes". It won't help anymore than you saying "I don't find this offensive",especially if it's been rehashed through the chat.... The mods have better things to do, so him freezing the room to stop pointless argumentation and move on to better things was appropriate.
    – Patrice
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 18:05

5 Answers 5

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I froze the room.

Let us start with the message that was posted there by a user.

I FUC*ING LOVE C# CHAT AND I WANT ALL OF YOU TO HAVE THE BEST ASSKICKING FRIDAY OF THIS WHOLE CO*KSUCKING YEAR.

This message wasn't hostile to anyone?

I found the words "FUC*ING" and "CO*KSUCKING" abusive so I suspended the user who posted this.

This was not well met by the C# room regulars, which are generally liberal with their language. The room culture generally does not flag or punish profanity as long as it is not hostile or directed at anyone.

Yes, that's another problem with your room. You sweep many vulgar messages under the carpet. I tried to convince you that the words "cocksuck*r* was bad, you guys were of the opinion that "vulgarity is relative*, I completely agree with the vulgarity being relative part. Here's what mods think :

Our standard with chat is this: if a transcript of a public chatroom was brought up in a public context outside of Stack Exchange, would it reflect very poorly on SE and its users? If so, that's something to act on. Rough language by itself may be dismissed even by others on the outside. It's what is being said that matters.

Chat here is different in that it's public and is associated with the site as a whole. The standards for what is acceptable here are different than those in an IRC or Slack channel. Things said here reflect on the site and non-chatting users.

So, in my opinion, what was being said was vulgar. So, I had to act. Note that some words or links might seem funny to you but could be vulgar in reality. Like I tried to explain when I was in the room, some of you might consider porn as something which is acceptable on SO chat (because it is not directed at anyone), but in reality porn is unacceptable here and we have seen several instances where people have posted links to obscene videos in your chatroom.

The room owners will also generally move offensive and NSFW to the trashcan and offenders will be warned

The fact that some room owners were not ready to accept that something needed to change was what led me to freezing the room. If the ROs are not happy with a mod asking them to stop being vulgar, then the room has to be dealt with.

It also follows that perhaps room culture should be respected in decisions of moderation. No active chat users felt it was offensive, the present room owners argued that the language was normal for the culture of the room, no hostility was directed at another user

Again, just because it is not offensive to you doesn't mean that it isn't offensive to others.

Also note that this is not the first time I tried reasoning with the ROs about being less vulgar. If we have a room where a good number of words are as*hole, co*k, bal*s, cu*t etc, then you are probably here for the wrong reasons.

Also note that a user I suspended for posting links to obscene videos had this to say -

The chat is filled with vulgar content as you say, I don't understand this suspension whatsoever. You could have warned me as you mention above, I didnt got warned about posting any "vulgar" content.

(I had warned him before).

Next, I did a search on "coc" in your chatroom and this is what I got (loads of 'em)

  • Holy avenging c*ck juggling thundercu*t of holding +5
  • You ghost that mother f*cker like he's a co*k roach.
  • co*kmongler A man who > (given opportunity) -will- suck your c*ck.

-- The list goes on

So I stand by my decision. If talking to the ROs and people doesn't help and a lot of messages are "not really offensive" to them, then the room had to be dealt with.

UPDATE: I did have a chat with the ROs and other users about vulgarity a fortnight ago. The exact statements that I made are shown below.

  • I found that sentence offensive and deleted it. Any reasonable person would agree with me. I did it after trying to understand the context around it (hence didn't suspend anyone)

  • I have no plans of micromanaging this room. "To all stupid people put panini in your ass****" or "I hope you like ana* because you are going to get fuc**d" cannot be part of a civilised conversation. Please ensure that you don't use such lines in the future.

  • As long as you guys keep the vulgarity under check, there won't be a problem.

  • You are one of the ROs. Try to keep it under control :). Keep it clean and "less abusive". Have a great day

  • Our definitions of "rude / vulgar" are clearly different. I understand that. Try to keep it as less vulgar as possible. Have a great day @others

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    well, to be fair, you freeze the room when you are in the middle of "talking to the ROs" so there's no more talking can get held.
    – tweray
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 17:30
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    @tweray - Well, if the ROs and other users thought that vulgarity should be allowed in their room, then there was nothing left to discuss.
    – TheLostMind Mod
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 17:36
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    @TheLostMind that's a very bold conclusion to be honest,, and you seems to be holding on it boldly too. I'd rather conclude it as "the ROs and other users have a different definition of vulgarity, and willing to discuss." The whole room is seeking some discussion and understanding on both sides idea. You seems to be only willing to judge.
    – tweray
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 17:46
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    again.... why should it be discussed? IF IT CAN BE SEEN AS VULGAR FROM OUTSIDE, IT IS. You can argue about your own definition of vulgar.... but that doesn't change that it can be seen as vulgar. I personally have no filter, so "c*ckmuncher" or whatever will not insult me. But I'm aware that it CAN insult others, so I wouldn't argue about "I don't find this offensive so we should be allowed to say it". If it comes down to "outside viewers can see it as insulting"... then I don't see how you would argue your point
    – Patrice
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 17:48
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    @tweray Given this recent quote, that appears to be not true at all: "We'll just continue as-is as we always have and someone at some point will take offense to something again and we'll repeat the whole drama again." Seems the room is being just as stubborn, if not more so
    – Waterseas
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 17:49
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    @tweray It's not that the mod is "bored". There is just no point to have a drawn out discussion in the chat room. It's not a debatable issue. Either behave and accept the rules, or you don't get to chat. If you want to discuss a moderator decision, take it to meta, which is the appropriate place for such discussions in public. Or if you wish to do so in private, use the "contact us" option.
    – Bart
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 18:05
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    @tweray you ever saw kindergarten children argue? They put their hands over their ears and scream until the other side caves in. This is not productive for ANYONE. Again, if your only argument is "I should be able to speak my mind" this is the poorest argument to defend your current position.
    – Patrice
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 18:15
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    You want the room @tweray? You can't handle the room!!! Ahem .. but seriously, if a mod steps in, you (the people present) have taken things to far. They are exception managers. At that point it's a matter of "understood" and you can go on. If that is not the case, they can't be asked to spend much time on convincing you. So the message needs to be made clear in another way. And that's what happened. If you want to argue the merits of the moderator stepping in, or the preventable freeze of the room, the room itself is not the place to do so.
    – Bart
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 18:17
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    @tweray I am labeling the argument you seem to be defending as akin to kindergarten children arguing. No reflection on you. I got into those pointless arguments at times, and I DID sound like a child(with hindsight, I see it). Sometimes backing up, re-reading the context and trying to see how you CAN change the outcome can help. Seriously, drop the pride about the room being frozen. Was the conversation REALLY going anywhere between you guys and TheLostMind? (if you tell me it WAS, I am backing up my whole position 100%. If it wasn't, then it was pointless and everyone has better things to do)
    – Patrice
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 18:19
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    @tweray but again..... your issue is the mod freezing the room because he didn't want to "listen". But if the conversation was going NOWHERE, there is no point in continuing it, no? And if there was no point in continuing, then if he just left the room out of the blue, you wouldn't have been happier, no? And just a headsup: I looked QUICKLY through the transcript, and even if you keep on saying there were no attacks or anything, I see " When you're alone, ashamed and full of guilt, you will be ready to ascend to mod-hood." which to me is aimed at the mod, and as an attack....
    – Patrice
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 18:29
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    @tweray okay then, what about "someone's power tripping"? Seriously, it doesn't look as civil as you make it sound, which really just reinforces my point.... If the conversation wasn't going anywhere, this was turning into a flame-war. From TheLostMind's edits on his answer, seems like the RO WERE warned before about what should and shouldn't happen.....
    – Patrice
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 18:43
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    Ohhh boy. This is what moderators have to put up with?
    – Pekka
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 19:29
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    @Pekka웃 Yeah… And they're wondering why they can't have nice things like rooms that don't get frozen. Commented May 20, 2016 at 20:28
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    @rlemon - Questioning for clarification is different from questioning to simply make a point. I was saying that the room had crossed the line and you guys were asking me why I wasn't moving my line a to match yours. To fix something, people must first accept that there is a problem. If you keep reiterating that there is no problem, then we can reach no solution. This is exactly what happened in the C# room. You guys weren't accepting that there was a problem, so there was no point in discussing it any further.
    – TheLostMind Mod
    Commented May 21, 2016 at 17:08
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    no, some people were not accepting there was a problem. Like I already stated, some of us were trying to provide a alternative approach or gain more knowledge about the decision made, not to defend the comments made. Dealing with a few "bad apples" by freezing the room just escalated the situation and made those who were trying to have a proper discussion feel penalized for questioning you.
    – rlemon
    Commented May 21, 2016 at 18:36
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I'm going to be frank here, with my thoughts as a user. Everything that follows is my thoughts as a user, and in no way official. This isn't a stance of the moderation team or staff.

Okay, I'll bite. I'm deliberately not addressing the specific problem at hand, but rather the constant use of 'culture' as an excuse for behavior that wouldn't otherwise be tolerated.

Room culture is a thing, but not as some rooms want it to be. Rooms are going to have a different "culture", that's normal. Culture, in this case, means "we like cat pictures here" and "we don't like cat pictures", or "we greet everyone with a happy face" or whatever. That's fine.

What room culture isn't: "we are R-rated and DON'T EVEN THINK ABOUT TOUCHING IT". I wouldn't mind if people took their R-rated conversations and language somewhere else; it doesn't need a place here. "Here" is indexed by Google, Internet Archive, and tons of other things. It's public. Do we really want this reflecting on the Stack Overflow name? Probably not.

I'm not saying that you can't use explicit language here, ever. There are some places where it's natural, and some rooms will have a slightly higher tolerance for it. Fine.

What is not acceptable is when a room gets a reputation among moderators of "those are the people that are abrasive to everyone and swear constantly, and if I try to do anything there I get pounded into the ground".

There are rooms that have that reputation, and it's not healthy.

We need to get rid of this room-culture-as-an-excuse thing. It's ridiculous and is impairing fair moderation.

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  • What is "R-rated", by the way? R like "repulsive"? Commented May 20, 2016 at 17:59
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    @DanielFischer R-rated, as in movie ratings. It's not a perfect analogy, but there isn't a perfect parallel for chat.
    – Undo Mod
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 18:02
  • "Restricted". Makes sense, but I find "repulsive" would be a cooler rating ;) Commented May 20, 2016 at 18:06
  • "if I try to do anything there I get pounded into the ground" shouldn't it be the other way around? I mean, if moderators aren't able to argue with civility, they can just nuke the whole thing and hand out suspensions.
    – Braiam
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 18:06
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    @Braiam Moderators are people too! Commented May 20, 2016 at 18:20
  • @MichaelHampton that came out of the blue...
    – Braiam
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 18:22
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    I'd say that the users in the C# room (myself being among one of them) are some of the most willing to help amongst any of the chat rooms. Enough people use it as a "Google this for me" service that we get annoyed sometimes, but if someone has a genuine question, we're very helpful, even to newbies.
    – Codeman
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 19:04
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    As a C# RO and regular, I actually take offense to the way you're portraying us here. I can think of at least 3 mods that come into our room at the very least on occasion and are perfectly comfortable around us. I have never once seen you in there. Commented May 20, 2016 at 19:06
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    @Sippy heh, I wonder why.
    – Seth
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 19:10
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    @Sippy Your account is not in the list of Room Owners?
    – Air
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 20:23
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    It was an hour ago. Commented May 20, 2016 at 20:26
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    @Codeman All the more reason to avoid profanity! Not all newbies with genuine questions are going to be interested in a room with this level of profanity, and hopefully you want to be welcoming to them all regardless. Being nice is part of being helpful.
    – Cascabel
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 21:35
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    It's unfortunate that a mod has to deal with all these things knowing that they will be pounded to the ground, thanks for putting up with all this with a lot of dignity. Commented May 21, 2016 at 3:58
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Full Disclosure: I am a C# RO

However, I am not pleased with what happened, and was not present during that time. My answer will perhaps naturally seem biased but it is addressing the outlook in general.


Profanity is essentially an instantaneous way towards having content removed anywhere on the Stack Exchange network. If you post a comment with profanity in it, and someone flags it, the system will automatically remove it without any oversight.

Chat has even less protection than comments. So if there is profanity in chat, then it is nearly guaranteed to be removed if flagged. Sometimes removal is silent, sometimes if the 10k community approves it then there is an associated 30 minute (or more depending on how many times this happens) ban from chat (not Stack Overflow). In this case, the ban length was one hour. I feel that the ban was justified. I disagree with the use of profanity in the current setting, and I feel that being banned is the risk associated with using profanity.

Arguing against the ban is therefore a losing endeavor. There is nothing to gain by arguing with a single moderator or with the moderation team as a whole, and the ensuing argument was entirely out of line.

I understand why TheLostMind felt pressured into freezing the room. It was unfortunate, and it has since been undone, but sometimes that is required during duress and there is a clear case for that here.

As a room owner, I apologize for this behavior. While I may not have been present, the outlook from us as a group has always been to be civil and it should have been upheld.

My stance in the room is as follows

Just because we cannot have someone in here supporting civility at all times doesn't mean it should run rampant when there is no oversight. This is the primary reason why moderation from escalation continues to be present. 1

If as a room owner you are not capable of enforcing civility in the room and coordinating with the Stack Overflow moderation team, then you should not be a room owner. 2

And I think that the majority of the users in the room agree.

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    Thank you for the very sensible answer about the issue. I feel better knowing that this is the stance of at least one of the ROs.
    – Patrice
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 20:16
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Room Culture

Let's get room culture straight. Room culture is not an excuse from the standard site policies.

Rooms have different cultures to each other, and that's fine. Using that fact as an excuse to be offensive and scare people away from the chat is not. "We talk about C#; they talk about C++" is room culture; to take an extreme example, "we post kiddie porn and you can't tell us off" is not.

I'm not saying that's what happened here, but that argument needs to be clear.

Curses! I got banned!

Cursing and swearing in chat is... touchy. In theory, the Be Nice policy applies equally in chat and on the main site: Nathan Oliver said this one well in his comment.

The fact the the room culture allows profanity does not make it okay. All rooms are public and anyone can lurk/be active in them. If you post something that offends them they have the right to flag that. From be nice: Inappropriate language or attention. Avoid vulgar terms and anything sexually suggestive. Also, this is not a dating site.

Moderation is generally a little more lax on this than it is on the main site. Some cursing is generally accepted; even quite a number of moderators curse on occasion. However, that doesn't take away people's right to a smooth experience and their right to not be offended. If some people find cursing offensive, tough luck. When curses get flagged on SE chat, I tend to edit them out, but the response really is down to the moderator.


I can't speak for the moderation team on SO, nor will I attempt to. However, from my perspective as a user, the discussion that was had with the moderator after the initial suspension was issued was... less than totally constructive. It's true that the nonconstructive comments died down, but there were a number of users sniping at the mod and accusing him of power abuse. As a moderator, trying to do your job to the best of your ability using the minimum "force" possible, that's incredibly disheartening. We're humans, we make mistakes; if you think a mistake has been made don't snipe and accuse.

My personal moderation response to this incident would have been slightly different. However, that's not to say that the moderator involved was wrong, which is why it's always important to bring these situations up directly with them.

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  • This is all just like Lounge<C++> V2.0 :(( Commented May 20, 2016 at 17:16
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    @MartinJames Exactly. Ideally, we can prevent that drama from happening many more times in the future.
    – Undo Mod
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 17:17
  • *low whistle* When you say extreme ...wow.
    – Makoto
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 17:17
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    @Martin James: Isn't that what C# is?
    – BoltClock Mod
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 17:17
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    really? That's a thing? @MaxVernon - Public decency laws, MPAA ratings, FCC censorship rules, explicit lyrics warnings, video game ratings, app ratings, behavior rules in any moderated gathering (on and offline), etc.
    – BSMP
    Commented May 20, 2016 at 20:17
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    @MaxVernon As someone pointed out in comments on the Q, this is a moderated community. If content is offending people, it's the offensive content that's gotta go. The network's explicit policy is that the choice should not be to either put up with offensive content or not use the site or parts of the site. To the contrary: the choice is to either avoid posting offensive content or have site usage privileges revoked. Commented May 20, 2016 at 20:34
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    @MaxVernon There's always something more important; that doesn't matter. We're not going to wait for cancer to be cured and world hunger to be solved before applying the site's code of conduct policies. “There are more important things to worry about” is an inherently toothless argument. Commented May 20, 2016 at 20:40
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I know that some of this has been said in other answers, but I just wanted to add my input on the matter.

Thoughts on the Mod's actions

So, from what I gather, the user was issued a short ban (1 hour), and the room was frozen. These actions seem in line with the site's philosophy on banning: it's a big time-out. It allows both sides to cool off, and recover their ability to think rationally, without having emotions clouding their judgement.

Thoughts on "Culture"

I rarely visit chat, and I have never participated in the C# room (at all: not chatting, not starring, and not flagging). Despite that, I feel that I can explain things in a way that will be very clear.

While I respect the idea of each chat room having its own culture, that does not give permission to deviate from the expectations that are present on the normal SO site.

Chat rules are only broader in the sense that anything "too chatty" or "not constructive" on main has a home in chat. From that point, every room has a right to restrict the scope further as long as they are not violating SO's policies. There are of number of rooms that focus on programming in a certain (programming) language, while others focus on moderating SO.

Thoughts on language

The language is unnecessary at best, and actively hostile and insulting at worst. (Except for the word "cockroach", which I do not feel warrants censorship in TheLostMind's answer.)

But I don't think that cursing is not the biggest problem; it may actually only be a symptom that some other things are present.

My opinions are mostly irrelevant in this matter, so I have substantiated everything with factual evidence. My only interest is ensuring that all parts of Stack Overflow are "nice", which is one of the core philosophies of the network. (I have no interest in chat, personally.)

I found a research paper that I feel is particularly relevant. It presents evidence that slang language (including a number of words that seem to be used quite often in this room) are offensive to some people. But it also explored the connection between slang and sexism (its main focus), and found a number of connections.

Stack Overflow has already been the subject of several different papers that come to the conclusion that Stack Overflow has fewer female programmers, even when compared with the numbers in the industry (where there are few to begin with).

Those two papers only explored the main part of SO. As a female programmer myself, I haven't had any problems on regular SO, but I am getting very different feelings from this chat room. See: here, here, and here.

I do not come to Stack Overflow looking for these problems; I come here for programming stuff. But I'm sure as hell not going to idly watch any part of Stack Overflow (or another SE site) devolve into a place where it is acceptable to marginalize the feelings and struggles of other people. And it's not just myself or my own groups that I care about.

It shouldn't be necessary to explain why things are offensive (indeed there are other reasons than the one I mentioned), nor should it be necessary to point out other examples of insensitive behaviors in this chat room that need to stop.

The defense for this behavior is:

No active chat users felt it was offensive, the present room owners argued that the language was normal for the culture of the room, no hostility was directed at another user.

If the profanity is not intended to hurt anyone's feelings, who cares?

I don't know what was intended, but I don't think it matters. It is very clear that the room has some hostile opinions, which could be considered bullying. Reference the Be Nice Policy:

Don't be a jerk. These are just a few examples. If you see them, flag them:

  • Bigotry of any kind. Language likely to offend or alienate individuals or groups based on race, gender, sexual orientation, religion, etc. will not be tolerated. At all. (Those are just a few examples; when in doubt, just don't.)
  • Inappropriate language or attention. Avoid vulgar terms and anything sexually suggestive. Also, this is not a dating site.
  • Harassment and bullying. If you see a hostile interaction, flag it. If it keeps up, disengage — we'll handle it. If something needs staff attention, you can use the contact us link at the bottom of every page.

The three bullet points there all fall under one definition: taboo. While there is some degree of variance, (American culture frowns upon asking others about their salary, for example,) the concept of taboo words is understood and practiced by most, if not all, human cultures on earth. If you can write in English, you probably already know its taboos.

For good measures let me also quote parts of the moderation guide:

you should only be flagging things that [the mods are] going to see as offensive as well

Which includes:

Anything that shocks the conscience (yes, this is subjective — let your conscience be your guide.)

Note that this refers to the flagger's conscience, not the room's. And of course this applies to anything where you have the option to flag, no matter who posted it.

A good rule of thumb: if your message is something that would be flagged as "Rude or Offensive" if it was on the main site, it's inappropriate for a message in chat.

Just because there is a group of people willing to put up with the chat room's behavior does not mean that the rest of Stack Overflow should be willing to put up with it.

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