Baum mit Augen here (my nomination), let me answer your questions:
- Stack Overflow seems to be burning moderators; the moderator review queue is huge; you handle 100 flags, but when you are done there are already 200 new flags. Why do you think it will be fun to handle all these flags every day? What will make you survive more than a few months?
I have spent a significant amount of time mostly reviewing-, but also devtime for better and faster reviewing on this site for far more than a few months.
Even if the life of a moderator was as monotonous as just handling NAA flags, I can deal with that without a problem. (Those messages are feedback to Bhargav Rao's bot, Natty, which reports potential new NAA/VLQ answers to old questions.)
I really see no problem for me going forward here.
- 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?
I would be very reluctant to destroy even mediocre valid answers, let alone "very good" ones. For one, deleting their work is not fair towards the answers' authors and their effort. Also, I don't like needlessly hiding the information they provided from future readers.
Instead, there are two things one can do to save both the asker and the content. For school work, it is probably enough to just disassociate the question from the asker's account.
Where that does not solve the problem, I would try to guide the asker in editing their question to be about the underlying programming problem instead of the specific assignment or piece of company code, for example, by replacing the offending code with a proper and abstract MCVE. Thus, we hopefully can get all of the problematic content out of the way while preserving the actual, useful programming knowledge.
- A user has been criticizing your moderation decisions on Meta. This has been occurring frequently over the course of a couple weeks. Some of these posts are very constructively made, with examples and reasoning, while some are more rants. While any mistakes you've made that have come to light were corrected when brought up, it seems that almost every day the user is finding something you've done to draw attention to. The user is a high rep user and generally does not cause trouble, but does seem to have an issue with your moderation style. How do you handle this situation?
I'm not running because we need some revolutionary new ways of moderation, but because we need more of the great moderation we already have. If I do my job right, I'll just blend in with the current team.
So if some user, high rep or not, who is fine with the current moderation continuously finds issues with my actions, I'm doing it wrong.
To resolve the issue, I'd try to learn how to fix my "moderation style" from their and other feedback. Hopefully, that would not take "several weeks" to begin with.
- Do you have any Meta posts that you're particularly proud of, or that you feel best demonstrate your moderation style?
Some time ago, I came across this question. While I very much agreed with the idea of rescuing those hidden gems, I found that the actual results were not as good as they could be. In my answer, I explained what parts of the process need improvement (in my opinion) so we can do a better job next time. I also attracted the attention of a moderator and went ahead and reviewed all answers to those questions. As a result, the poor answers were removed and the hidden gems actually got the exposure they deserved.
The take away from this: we should always review our own actions, and if they don't fully achieve their goal, try and improve the results.
- As a moderator, you see something useful or interesting in a question by a low-reputation user, however there are a lot of downvotes and couple of flags on this question. Will you trust your gut and edit the question or otherwise override the community, or close it based on the opinion of these other reputable users?
I will not "trust my gut", nor will I take action simply "based on the opinion of these other reputable users."
Like I do now, I will take moderator actions if I know they are correct. So if I have sufficient domain knowledge to identify significant value in the question and to get it up to our quality standards, I will be happy to polish the gem. If I can judge the flags to be correct, I will act on them.
But for the bulk of questions, I would say the opinion of the domain experts reviewing them is more useful and valuable than the mod hammer.
- As we all know, Stack Overflow is near its completion (mature) (over its top if you like, or even has its way of doing things). The old-timers have their reputation, moderation tools and the occasional brawl on Meta. It is time for the next generation to take the wheel. How will you moderate the new flood of users and their content, given that most of them have different expectations from the current inhabitants? Are you going to defend what we currently have or are you going on a journey to shape the community to make them ready for the next 6 to 8 years? Please take a stand and elaborate.
The core goal of our effort here is and always was to build a long-term, high quality Q/A repository for programming questions. I think this is a goal we can all agree on.
Now what that means for every specific post is, of course, subject to change as with everything in this world. This is nothing new, either; a lot of old and very well received questions would be off-topic today.
So to get to the point: I would work to preserve our core goal as stated above, but I would of course embrace the changes in how we define it in its details. As I don't see the community moderator as a political role, I will not try to do significant "shaping"; the direction we are heading is for Meta to decide. Whatever path we end up taking as a community, I will help to get where we want to go.
- A user who consistently asks poorly-researched questions gets flagged by another user (Example flag texts). What will you do?
This will of course depend on the specific case at hand. The average "help vampire" is effectively dealt with by automatic means, i.e. the question ban one receives when asking too many poorly received questions.
However, it is a known issue that some (rare) exceptional users managed to ask one or more questions that are sufficiently well received to prevent a ban (however the secret algorithm decides that). That's the category a user that "consistently asks poorly-researched questions" would fall into, I suppose. For those, a moderator flag seems like the correct tool, and after determining how much harm they are actually causing, I would take appropriate action. Though a simple heads-up in a mod message would hopefully be enough.
- A lot has been said and asked about what a moderator is and what a moderator does. What do moderators not do? That is, other than "violate the rules" (which is already a given), what are the most important behaviors that a moderator should avoid engaging in or should make a valiant effort to minimize? Another way to phrase this is to ask: What are the most important unwritten behavior rules for mods that are not found in any SO/SE policy, AUP, code of ethics, or legal statute?
Several things that come to mind follow from the criteria on the election page, like being "patient and fair" or leading by example, so I am not sure if you would count that as "unwritten".
But for starters, I would expect a moderator to be exceptionally constructive in comments. A moderator should strive to not even come close to be perceived as snarky or "trollish", which is (when looking at the reports by Queen) how a lot of the community's reactions are seen by askers. A moderator must keep their cool, not get angry or defensive, even after direct insults, and calmly resolve any heated situation.
Another big point is conflict of interest: we bestow a lot of power onto our moderators, which works because they are trusted to use it to the best of the site. It is thus essential that a moderator does not take any action that even could raise the suspicion they acted mainly in their own interest. They should stay away from Q/As that they have a stake in or flags that involve them when using their moderator tools whenever possible.
- Negative of number 4 - Are there any meta posts which you are not proud of? In other words, if you ever ask a meta post, and it receives a lot of negative feedback, what would you do? (Would you ask for it to be dissociated from your account?)
Not really. Admittedly, I don't have a lot of Meta posts to begin with; I mostly read discussions here and express my opinion through votes.
If I had a very bad post though, I would not ask to disassociate it from my account. I would either admit I was wrong or stand by my unpopular opinion, but I would not try to "sneak out", but take full responsibility for my actions.
- 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?
First of all, I make sure that they actually are the problem. I personally have left 1000s of comments, most of them canned and carefully crafted to be constructive. Yet, I would be surprised if those haven't attracted a couple of dozen flags by users not happy about their posts being closed or deleted.
When we determined that it's actually the attitude of the user that causes the problems, we need to fix that some way or the other.
A reasonable chain of measures would be something like a simple warning at first to simply show them they act in an unacceptable way. If that is not enough, try and make him understand exactly why their behavior needs to change, with a discussion in chat, for example. If that fails, let another mod try with different words, maybe there's some culture barrier or something.
If all that fails, they should be stopped from contributing until they learn their lesson. No one is that awesome and useful content wise that we should allow them to create a toxic atmosphere in our community.
- How would you handle a situation where another mod closed/deleted/etc a question that you feel shouldn't have been?
I would have to feel fairly strongly about the question to doubt the other mod's action. In my experience on this site, they take their actions for good reasons.
If I did have a strong suspicion the action was incorrect, I would go and talk to the mod in question to eliminate the chances I missed something vital. Through that, we should arrive at some conclusion about how the content should be handled, and take appropriate action or leave it as is.