At first, I thought it was obvious that Stack Overflow for Teams would be subject to the full Code of Conduct (CoC) and other applicable content and behavior policies, however Catija ♦ mentioned in an answer,
Stack Overflow doesn't moderate content in your Team. They explicitly don't have access to the Teams content except in extreme cases. They're not looking for voting rings....
While this was said in the context of voting rings/serial voting (seemingly implying that it's acceptable, but discouraged, to engage in serial voting within a Team as long as it doesn't spread onto the public Stack), it made me wonder what other kinds of behavior are allowed in Teams that would be disallowed on the regular, public SO stack. I suppose "extreme cases" include unlawful content and criminal behavior (e.g. using Teams to plan a heist, posting unlawful images, using Teams to leak classified documents, etc.), but does the line stop at unlawful behavior, or do "extreme cases" also include legal behavior that violates Stack Overflow values? What behaviors that are forbidden on the main stack are allowed on a Team as long as they stay within the Team? For example, is it acceptable to:
- Spam a Team
- Post Rude messages, i.e. messages that "[a] reasonable person would find...inappropriate for respectful discourse", but that are considered appropriate within the social context of the Team
- Engage in bigotry, if bigotry is one of the values of the Team
- Not be open for feedback
- Fail to include an MCVE when posting a debugging request
- Post questions that would be too broad, unclear, or opinion-based for the main site (e.g. "What database do you think we should use for the QXR Phase 1 Project?" or "How can we solve this really complex thing that only people who work here would know about and that isn't explained in the text of this question?")
- Post non-programming questions (e.g. "Where do I get a parking pass for our downtown building?", "What is the correct timesheet code for working on the payroll system?", or "Should Bill be kicked off the team?")
- Post NAA answers, including posting Link-Only Answers or using answers to "bump" a question
I'm not asking whether a Team has the authority to make their own decisions on how and when to take action against these kinds of behaviors within the context of their own team. I'm asking whether Stack Overflow and/or Stack Exchange intends to do so. E.g. if a Team member contacts Stack Overflow and says, "User bjones on Team Whatever keeps posting 'Answers' to his own questions saying 'I need a status update on this item by Friday, failure to do so will result in employee discipline'", will Stack Overflow just say, "Deal with it in your Team or else leave it" or will they come in, delete the NAA content, and possibly suspend bjones for low-quality content or rule violations?