2028

I'm resigning as a Stack Overflow moderator.

Thank you to everyone who has worked hard to make this Q&A site what it is.

I'm resigning for three reasons:

  1. Stack Overflow Inc. has forgotten how to lead, how to persuade, and how to talk with the community. This has been a slow decline since 2014 and we are now at the point where the company's actions show they no longer want to build a relationship with the community they have.

    All criticisms of company actions have been lumped together as "this is just meta, they're malcontents, and we don't need to listen to them." They do not partake in the activities that are needed to build and grow a community. They overwork their Community Managers and force them to act as intercessors without giving them the authority to help build the community.

    In short, the people who have spent the better part of a decade working with the community are now sidelined from interacting with the community absent explicit permission from the powers that be.

  2. Since the current people in charge also make the decisions regarding the moderator review/removal process, I am not confident that moderators are seen as partners in community building, but rather volunteers to be tightly controlled. The proposed Moderator Review process lacks due process, codifies the decision making in the hands of the same people who have created the mess we're now experiencing, and treats oversight of the process in a token fashion. They may as well have retained their previous statement that "community moderators can be removed at any time, for any reason", because that's what the proposed process codifies, with the illusion of impartiality. The only actions I have to go on are how Monica was removed as moderator, and until I see actual evidence that Stack Overflow understands how to administer due process and a fair resolution process, I can't trust that Stack Overflow will follow any process it sets down and that the process will be fair and equitable.

  3. I have lost trust in Stack Overflow executives. This is a highly volatile time that requires more attention than is visibly given. The people of the community need to feel heard, and their criticisms addressed. We are receiving none of that, and their response times are measured in days and weeks, not hours.

I fully support and agree with the Code of Conduct change to explicitly welcome members of under-served backgrounds, and I will continue to work to ensure people new to Stack Overflow feel cared for and feel like they can be a part of this great community we have built.

Thank you for allowing me to serve you.

72
  • 176
    Oh my gods. Please be well. Thank you for the countless reasonable actions you have taken over the years. Thank you so much for all you've done. Oct 15, 2019 at 12:11
  • 170
    Pffff. I fully support your decision. But I hate it.
    – Gimby
    Oct 15, 2019 at 12:12
  • 98
    You are one of the best. Thanks, and I do hope ALL mods follow your lead now, and will force SE to change their bad course, or be shut down. There's no way SE staff can moderate Stack Overflow by themselves. Oct 15, 2019 at 12:18
  • 231
    Upvoting not because this is good, or because I have unconditionally supported your stance on matters, but because this post deserves to be seen, for good or ill.
    – Raedwald
    Oct 15, 2019 at 12:21
  • 84
    This is the second biggest shock, after Monica's demodding. Maybe, this is the one signal that will finally shake up the management. An absolutely unexpected decision, but absolutely supported. Be well.
    – Mari-Lou A
    Oct 15, 2019 at 12:21
  • 47
    I haven't always agreed with your style, but I have valued your commitment to the site and your stance on all this. It's a shame it has come to this, you'll be missed. Oct 15, 2019 at 12:23
  • 110
    @Mari-LouA Don’t hold your breath. Sara Chipps pulled a classic Sara Chipps on Twitter, when reacting to George’s thread on why moderators felt like they were simply being used as unpaid labor.
    – Dan Bron
    Oct 15, 2019 at 12:26
  • 166
    We've locked horns a few times, most of them recently, and even here I can't wholly agree with you - like many of the community, I don't agree with the Code of Conduct change, and think the problems go beyond how it was delivered. But you were a well-meaning mod and good human being, who took on the thankless and demanding job of modship and did his best to perform it honourably. Thank you for your service to us. Be well.
    – Mark Amery
    Oct 15, 2019 at 12:59
  • 95
    @GrumpyCrouton Sara is known for her non-response responses, her non-apology apologies. Etc.
    – Dan Bron
    Oct 15, 2019 at 13:03
  • 38
    @GrumpyCrouton I'm guessing this one
    – OrangeDog
    Oct 15, 2019 at 13:05
  • 97
    I agree Sara has said some things that are rightly criticized harshly but my goodness, folks. It is neither fair nor necessary nor productive to comment on every damn utterance she has ever made somewhere with the biggest possible assumption of bad faith. When you have people criticizing "I learn from coworkers X and Y every day" you know something's gone over the top. Yes maybe it's a platitude; so f-ing what? People at SO and elsewhere shower each other with these every day. It's part of modern culture in some industries and circles and at worst, really really harmless.
    – Pekka
    Oct 15, 2019 at 13:38
  • 60
    Has the new CEO, who has already been in place for two weeks, said anything publicly about the very valid points you and other mods have raised?
    – j08691
    Oct 15, 2019 at 13:46
  • 218
    @Pekka웃 I suspect OrangeDog means to point to the "I'm sad people don't feel heard" Tweet, and I think he's fair enough in doing so. The point isn't that the Tweet is objectionable in isolation, it's that the expression of goodwill in transparently insincere. She voices the platitude that she wants George to feel heard, but then declines to engage substantively with anything in the multiple paragraphs that he wrote; there isn't even a perfunctory effort to live up to the platitude. It's insulting in the same way as being told "Your call is very important to us" after an hour on hold.
    – Mark Amery
    Oct 15, 2019 at 14:19
  • 55
    You sir are a legend and I'm just sad to see you go! Oct 15, 2019 at 14:20
  • 75
    @Trilarion I've been leaving (and will leave more feedback) privately before discussing it publicly; but after it's published publicly I'd be happy to go further into depth if my concerns still remain. Bottom line is that the process looks like it's been reverse engineered to achieve the outcome desired (removal) instead of a fact-finding process designed to ensure there's justice. Oct 16, 2019 at 10:53

23 Answers 23

465

George, I've known you for as long as you've been a part of this site. You were an example to me and many others as we fumbled around trying to figure out how to make this work - your posts, your comments on the blog before meta existed, and most of all your behavior as you interacted with others set the bar that the rest of us strove to reach.

If a moderator's primary duty is to be an ambassador of trust then you have fulfilled that duty, consistently, for far longer than you've actually been a moderator - and I've no doubt that you will continue to do so.

So thank you for that; thank you for making the site better not just in what you've done but in how you've done it.

It saddens me to see you stepping down in these circumstances, but I'm happy to have been able to work closely with you for the time that we have had.

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  • 65
    You (pl) shouldn't be letting him go. He is the one moderator that never pandered to the masses.
    – Mari-Lou A
    Oct 15, 2019 at 14:02
  • 61
    Do something to stop the haemorrhaging!
    – Mari-Lou A
    Oct 15, 2019 at 14:04
  • 70
    Exactly what @Mari-LouA said. He was never afraid to say what was unpopular but correct, and was always a supporter of SE, looking at things from your perspective. The fact that he's leaving now means SE has no advocate here.
    – yhyrcanus
    Oct 15, 2019 at 14:08
  • 83
    @Mari-LouA I'm 100% sure that if Shog was in a position to stop George from quitting (i.e. senior role in SE management), this whole recent crisis would have never happened in the first place. The main reason it sparked, the way I see it, is total lack of commutation and total lack of understanding how Stack Exchange communities work. Shog is not lacking any of those. Oct 15, 2019 at 14:15
  • 42
    @Mari-LouA - Shog also has bosses with the power to decide things and the ability not to listen to anything he says. It's not fair to lay this at his feet. Oct 15, 2019 at 14:26
  • 275
    @Mari-LouA I like to think of it this way: With the decade of public footprint Shog, Tim Post, et. al., have; if they could reach out and improve things, they would have done so. We know this because we can go through their history and see past examples of how they've done so. Something happened that we're not privy to that caused them to stop being able to help make things better. It's evident from their public answers and the shift and tenor of Stack Overflow Inc., in general. Oct 15, 2019 at 14:29
  • 16
    @GeorgeStocker so true. I admire both (Shog and Tim) for trying their best even with hands tied. Oct 15, 2019 at 14:37
  • 14
    Tim & Shog, and the CM team are generally awesome - that much isn't disputable. It sucks that they have to deal with this.
    – user6892953
    Oct 15, 2019 at 15:13
  • 17
    Shog, btw, bug report: your badge counts wrap in your user card
    – Sklivvz
    Oct 15, 2019 at 16:06
  • 17
    @GeorgeStocker Shog, with his usual eloquence, perfectly sums up my feelings - thank you for all you have done for this community and I am saddened to see you go. Oct 15, 2019 at 16:40
  • 79
    @gdoron If Tim and Shog aren't able to speak up to allay concerns (and they're community managers, and Tim was previously the director of community -- unclear what his role is now), then you can guarantee that no matter how Taryn or any other employee feels, they're not going to speak up. I don't know how they feel, or whether they support the methods used by SO Inc, but what I do know is it's impossible that 100% of all the employees agree with how these changes have been conducted. The ones that don't agree aren't speaking up because they don't feel it's safe to. Oct 15, 2019 at 19:26
  • 29
    Tim & Shog9 are among the few ones chatting with us in the moderator chatroom (along with Catija, Megan, and maybe some others I forgot). They've always followed mods closely and supported/helped them. Oct 15, 2019 at 20:01
  • 16
    I haven't had the pleasure of knowing George for anywhere near as long as Shog or many other folks chiming in here, but I still want to wholeheartedly echo the sentiments shared. In less than a year, I've learned so much from George. Thank you. <3
    – Meg Risdal
    Oct 15, 2019 at 23:22
  • 10
    Book? Ha! I have it on good authority that programmers have stopped reading books, @ghostcat - it'll be a long, confusing mess of Instagram posts or whatever the kids are reading by then.
    – Shog9
    Oct 16, 2019 at 3:46
  • 13
    Just compile all of his Meta posts into a book, @GhostCat, and maybe add a gloss. It worked for Raymond Chen. Oct 16, 2019 at 4:44
156

We have not always seen eye to eye on issues here, but I have always respected your integrity, your unflinching and unwavering fairness and your absolute willingness to explain yourself and your decisions, and to be a leader in both word and thought for this community.

You embody all the qualities I expect a good moderator to have, and it has been a pleasure being active on a site that had you on it.

All the best.

1
  • 6
    I second this all. George was one of our finest moderators IMO and with so many of them gone now - for good reason -, and so few left (for how long?), I really feel quite discouraged to participate in the site anymore.
    – Marc.2377
    Oct 17, 2019 at 1:57
132

I don't remember any specific disagreements I've had with you, but whenever I see your avatar I have this lingering sense of slight annoyance you have about someone with a different point of view that you've had to grudgingly come to agree with more than once. 😄😄😄

It's sad to see you go - but it seems like the only correct decision at this point.

Thank you for your work and all the best.

2
  • 63
    "...whenever I see your avatar I have this lingering sense of slight annoyance you have about someone with a different point of view that you've had to grudgingly come to agree with more than once." That is the perfect phrasing. Thank you for putting into words precisely how I feel about George. He and I have not always agreed about the details, but we've long been in agreement about the big picture and our mission here. It is a loss that we will surely feel, and I fear it is only the beginning of the bleeding. Oct 15, 2019 at 16:10
  • 33
    @CodyGray: His phrasing was definitely impekkable
    – user541686
    Oct 17, 2019 at 4:36
128

I did not see this coming.

George, I know the last few weeks have been rough, and we haven't always agreed, but you always seemed to have a way of dealing with what's thrown at you and turning it into something constructive.

Take it easy.

2
113

George: absolute thanks for running the show for years.

Stack Exchange Inc.: "thanks" for ruining the show, probably forever!

1
  • 1
    Especially in the light of the new "thanks" button: A horrible change to Stack Exchange Inc., and proves that they are just ruining this site.
    – 10 Rep
    Jun 25, 2020 at 3:29
110

George, this is one of those resignations that came out of left field for me. I wanted to respond to this earlier when I read it, but I realized I couldn't get out what I wanted to on a phone so I had to wait until I was at a keyboard.


I'll be honest. There weren't times when I thought we saw eye-to-eye. Of the moderators here, I felt like you were the closest to the company (read: furthest from the community) on how you approached things on a day-to-day basis. That's not to say I didn't at least appreciate what you did; it just led to more friction from me. This was especially painful when you had a bit of a clunky "return" to Meta, and it was just...I mean, you were at least trying.

Your resignation came up as a big surprise since I wouldn't have bet that you'd go anywhere, especially since it seemed like you "got" why Stack Overflow was doing this. I suppose I really don't know what goes on behind closed doors, and I can at least accept that I understood nothing.

It seems like your patience has finally run out, so at this point, I thank you for what you've done for the community.

1
  • 11
    This is exactly how I feel put into words.
    – S.S. Anne
    Oct 15, 2019 at 19:35
86

You already know this, but you're one of the people on Stack Overflow I've always looked up to. I remember the early days of Meta when I'd see a new question, notice you'd left an answer, and know that I wouldn't need to write anything more. Your actions helped shape opinions and processes in ways that impact the site every day.

It's fun going back and reading the comments under your nomination, because I felt sure members of the site wouldn't appreciate the hard work you did. The thankless cleanup work you did over the years started long before you were a moderator. I was shocked when both of us somehow made it through that election, and you've done an enormous amount of work since that time to make this site better.

One small silver lining to all this is looking around this post and seeing people recognize the positive impact you've had.

You exemplified the philosophy that moderators are elected because the community trusts our judgment, and we should rely on that judgment to determine how best to help and protect the people here and the site we all use. I could always count on you to defend the members and content of this site. You always made it clear why you thought an action was in the best interests of everyone, even when others disagreed.

You've done that once again. I'm really sad to read this, but I completely understand why you felt it was necessary. You should be proud of how many people your volunteer work helped over all these years. I'll really miss having you around.

46

Oh no....

Sorry to see you go, I cannot believe we have lost yet another great moderator. You have been one of the most respected Moderators here.

Best wishes, and keep an eye on us...

46

I just learned the bad news and I'm not enjoying it to say the least.

During the short time we served together, I've seen you working and I always admired the kindness & fairness you were handling the flags with (even if you sometimes deleted my moderator comments that were flagged as "rude or abusive" hey I was doing my job :)).

I also enjoyed the quality of your meta posts, and of course our interactions in the moderator chatroom. I just can't believe that so many worthy people are leaving... You'll be missed as a mod.

2
  • 15
    You can now undelete those comments without it being awkward. Although I will say that my default stance is to delete comments and I often would basically click the delete button as quickly as possible. it kinda irked me that moderator comments get flagged by that autobot, but anyway. Thank you for your kind words. Oct 15, 2019 at 19:32
  • 7
    @GeorgeStocker I fully understand what you've done and why and you already explained that to me in the chatroom. It's not a problem as long as I'm not suspended for doing my work ;) I just wanted to add a little fun to this sad news. Oct 15, 2019 at 19:34
36

I'd like to roughly echo Pekka's sentiments in his answer:

I don't remember any specific disagreements I've had with you, but whenever I see your avatar I have this lingering sense of slight annoyance you have about someone with a different point of view that you've had to grudgingly come to agree with more than once.

We have knocked heads a few times back in SO's formative days but I honestly can't remember specifically what these disagreements were about. They don't matter now.

I've learned many things about dealing with new people whilst building a community and you were definitely part of that learning process...in a good way I grudgingly admit :) I did in truth sometimes think you were a wee bit of a "company man" but today you've proved me wrong.

Anyway, I'm having a wee glass of Chilean red and I'm raising a glass to you and the efforts you've put into the SO community over the past 10+ years. Here's to you.

1
  • 7
    The bit on raising a glass had me literally with a tear in the eye now. Guess I'm joining. Here's too great mods and contributors pushed away by... by what? I can't even define.
    – Marc.2377
    Oct 17, 2019 at 2:25
33

What!? No, not you too...

I several times suggested to you to take a break from moderation, and once you replied with this:

@jl2210 I’d resign before shirking my duty.

I didn't expect you to go through with this, but, well, I guess I was wrong.

We didn't always agree with you, but that doesn't mean we won't miss your support.

See you around.


Is this my fault? I saw this discussion (that I most likely caused) under your answer here:

@GeorgeStocker I'd advise you to turn a blind eye to this until the company figures out what they want. Just do your usual duties and walk away from this controversy. – JL2210

@jl2210 I’d resign before shirking my duty. – George Stocker ♦

@GeorgeStocker I think it's time for you to decide whether your duty is to the company or to the community. – mason

@mason I am doing all I can for my part to ensure those are aligned. Ultimately I made an agreement with SO inc to moderate SO and its meta according to their policies. At the moment I do not feel in good faith I can do that, I will resign. – George Stocker ♦

I hope not.

4
  • 75
    Not at all, JL2210. I made the decision on the spot this morning after spending a long weekend away. It had been building. There were glimmers of hope, but the people tasked with designing the policies have not shown that they are aware how destructive their methods are to the community. Their responses (when there is a response) lack any understanding or listening required to ensure the relationship between the community and company is fruitful and productive. There’s only so long any one person can fight for change before they recognize it is futile. Oct 15, 2019 at 21:33
  • 10
    @GeorgeStocker You've been a bright light around here for quite awhile, and a staunch defender of "let's hear the facts first" throughout this whole mess over the past month (?). Several of your comments in this thread illuminate that you aren't the SE sock-puppet some would cast you as but a deeply thoughtful, committed person. I've watched the mess on MSE and your calming presence in it and "thought, if George goes, no one is left to calm the waters". I hope SE realizes that. Oct 16, 2019 at 8:56
  • 4
    I am so sad watching SO inc set fire to its creation (and those who did the work paying the price). The software development world would not be where it is today without SO. Oct 16, 2019 at 16:56
  • 1
    @GeorgeStocker Woa. "Their responses (when there is a response) lack any understanding or listening required to ensure the relationship between the community and company is fruitful and productive." This... does not bode well at all.
    – Almo
    Oct 16, 2019 at 17:54
30

I know we did not agree with the new moderation policies on Meta, and that this may have made it seem like I had a problem with you specifically.

But I want to say I did see you as a good moderator for Main and found the conversation we had on Meta to be far more civil and productive than those I've had with Staff (which I appreciate). As, I think we agreed with the ultimate goal even if we disagree on the policy to get there.

So good luck and thanks for the hard work.

20

George, thank you for your contributions to Stack Overflow.

What I'd like to know is...

What could Stack Exchange Inc do to change your mind?

Clearly you don't expect the company is capable or willing to change, else you'd not be resigning. You've done a fine job of articulating your reasons for leaving. Yet, I'd like to suggest that you leave a final, concrete set of specific actions that, if taken by management, would lead you to want to continue your great work here.

I've posted a question so that you (and perhaps others) might answer this question there.

Thank you.

0
19

I don't know what Jeff Atwood and Joel Spolsky think of the path their creation is being dragged down, but I hope the new CEO and management team don't screw up what has become an indispensable web resource for developers and lots of other communities.

Stack Exchange is a gem. Don't mess it up.

1
  • 5
    I put responded to Joels tweet where he announces the new CEO, linking to this very question here, and suggesting that a perfect time to come back and save his company ... would be now. Not surprisingly: no reaction. At all.
    – GhostCat
    Oct 24, 2019 at 7:24
19

That should be an eye-opening thing for management. If a person, who has given years to this community as a representative of Stack Overflow, got discouraged and stepping down with a heavy heart then this should be a point of concern for management.

We, as community, really thank you George for your services and stand with you.

18

After the An apology to our community, and next steps post, I thought that the tide was changing after a long time.

The resignation of such a Colossal moderator alerted me, and I'd like to let you know that your action strong signals towards me (just another "avg" user).

And remember:

In the end, all that matters is what you've done.

And I, IMHO, strongly believe that when you go to sleep in the night and sometimes think of all the awesome things you have done for the community, then you'd feel proud, to say the least.


Phrase from Mega Alexander movie

12

As I mentioned in a comment, in my view you were one of the finest mods on this site.

For years - since discovering this thing called Meta - I have silently appreciated how well you justify your actions, with clear, solid reasoning.

This post is no different.

I'm saddened - as I was after reading each and every other moderator resignation notice. Actually, more sad, since after reading the update from the CTO I had some expectation that things were indeed going to end up being alright.

(Meanwhile, the resignation notice(s) I was hoping for have not surfaced and I don't think they ever will at this point.)

Thank you and good luck moving forward.

0
11

This is really sad. Of course, there are times when I have openly disagreed with George but this does not invalidate his first reason for tendering a resignation. George is right!

If there's one thing that is obvious in this community, it is the fact that the company has a masked disregard for the meta-community and her representatives. I hate to be too direct but if the truth is not represented this way, who are we kidding? We are going to have this same discussion over and over again.

On a side note, when Prashanth Chandrasekar became CEO, I highlighted this:


enter image description here

This isn't healthy. If things continue this way, the dream (as described by the last CEO) might not be attained, or at best, not be attained anytime soon. Something needs to be done.

9

Sorry to see you go, George! I remember in particular your stance against deleting good content:

We do not delete good content. We do not delete good content.

Also sorry to be asking this, but I've been out of the loop with the recent events, and only see general references to them in this thread. Can someone point/link to some of the examples that have driven resignations? Thank you.

1
9

I don't know George. But I want to be a part of this (seems something important). Stack Overflow is important to me. It helped me with a lot of my coding problems and more importantly I am happy to have helped others in their problems.

Hearing the site's problems from someone inside is always never good. I hope the top management take heed of the points outlined and improve.

7

George, you are one of our finest moderators here. After hearing the news of your resignation, I really feel quite discouraged to participate on the site any more.

6

George who? JK. Seriously, may the wind be at your back...

-100

I'm really sorry to see you go. It's difficult for me to envision the office without you.

I'm also sorry that you feel the way you do about the proposed procedures. They're still open for feedback, we've got the condensed text versions to clear up some ambiguities in the charts ready to go out today, and more feedback is being incorporated to add clarity.

There will always have to be a system where we, in an emergency, can pull a lever to remove a moderator's access immediately. If they violate their moderator agreement, get into public "brawls" with other moderators, have their accounts compromised or a running script go haywire - we have to revoke access immediately. Our privacy policy mandates it.

But, the new policy automatically kicks in the discovery phase where 2 CMs are assigned to look into everything going on and render a decision. There's a phase where we, if we have very confidential information that was communicated in trust by a user to senior management (and this has happened, where someone wasn't comfortable with the CMs knowing their sexual orientation, gender, religion, or other personal things) can step in and halt the process, or require a precondition to be met prior to reinstatement, but it would always be communicated to the mod, and would be extremely rare. There are some former moderators that just can not, under any circumstances receive access again. We can't build a policy for the next 10 years in a vacuum.

I hate how everything happened too. I've been literally sick about it for the last few weeks, but it is also a very rare anomaly when it comes to moderation here. It is very rare that a moderator is asked to step down for reasons other than vanishing.

I wish you luck in everything you do and we really need to make time to get that burger and beer - but I didn't want you leaving thinking we were done with things, and I need to get our side of why things are written the way they are out there.

Thanks for your service George. We're going to miss you.

50
  • 79
    I hope management at the company treats this as the loud wake up call that it is.
    – Magisch
    Oct 15, 2019 at 12:29
  • 114
    You have always been a beacon of kindness and understanding in the community, and I thank you for publicly reaching out even though it hurts to do so. I would love to talk more about my concerns about the proposed process offline, but honestly if we're able to get that burger and beer I'd rather just listen to your life story and learn more about you. I've respected you for as long as I've known you, and you continue to be one of the bright spots of being a member of this community. Oct 15, 2019 at 12:29
  • 57
    @TimPost I would in that case expect SE to substantiate at least exactly what that moderator did and why they can not be reinstated. Including evidence, redacted where need be.
    – Magisch
    Oct 15, 2019 at 12:35
  • 171
    @TimPost: I think we can all understand a emergency clause like that, but the problem here is that in recent events that clause appears to have been used to get rid of Monica while that wasn't warranted (to the public eye). The core problem here being a lack of communication from higher up the chain, a lack of clarification, and a lack of promised action. That results in broken trust... When there's no trust, focus on an emergency clause like that seems misplaced...
    – Cerbrus
    Oct 15, 2019 at 12:35
  • 65
    @TimPost then it seems like you have a credibility problem that runs deeper then what a policy and going forward can resolve, and seems like it'll require a lot of reflection. If George quits, you know you have lost the trust of most of your userbase, perhaps without recourse. Best of luck.
    – Magisch
    Oct 15, 2019 at 12:37
  • 70
    Tim, I say this with all the good will I have. The problem SE is for some reason not seeing is that the last... year and an half now? have basically been a chain of "very rare anomaly" events to use your words. And while I get you folk are tired and hurt.. so we are.
    – SPArcheon
    Oct 15, 2019 at 12:43
  • 193
    A process for emergency removal, while of course necessary, is unrelated to recent events. (I don't blame you personally either; SE upper management is pulling the strings here. But I am profoundly disappointed in their hurtful, damaging, unjust actions against me. Companies don't have to follow anything like due process and are allowed to act capriciously (though libel is still a problem). I'm just disappointed that SE is going that route.) Oct 15, 2019 at 12:50
  • 106
    I support that Monica was removed -- I understand the reasons behind it and with the evidence I saw it made sense. However, and this is the crux of my issue: The manner in which Monica was removed (not adhering to existing process; not following any semblance of due process; not clearly articulating the problematic behavior and the consequences of the problematic behavior; not being very clear about the next steps to all, and publicly saying thing that shouldn't have been said) forms the basis for me being quite concerned about any proposed process. SO Inc hasn't fixed existing issues. Oct 15, 2019 at 12:50
  • 78
    Though I appreciate you responding and trying, I had to downvote this because of the use of rarely. The firing may have been a "rare" event but I have posts on Main Meta & here spanning a year that point to the same problems we are still having - the communication problems are not rare anymore they're the norm
    – LinkBerest
    Oct 15, 2019 at 12:52
  • 73
    I understand your concerns Tim, but unless the monumental mistake of dismissing Monica merely because she disagrees with SE is corrected, you have to understand that moderators do not trust you. Your answer is myopic because it only addresses extreme cases (we know whom), but does not address the elephant in the room: abuse by Stack Exchange towards volunteer mods.
    – Sklivvz
    Oct 15, 2019 at 12:54
  • 54
    The "system" is currently broken. Badly. And it doesn't appear that the people in charge see it as such.
    – Oded
    Oct 15, 2019 at 13:11
  • 50
    @JoshDarnell - I'd have been a lot more impressed if it were David Fullerton, Sara Chipps or Prashanth Chandrasekar responding here. Glad as I am that Tim responded, unfortunately it doesn't mean much in the current climate.
    – Oded
    Oct 15, 2019 at 13:13
  • 36
    @TimPost Maybe the whole problem in "having two CM deciding that someone has to lose moderator status" is not in that part, but the part where currently nobody actually trusts current CMs or people above them are capable of handling such situations fairly.
    – Dalija Prasnikar Mod
    Oct 15, 2019 at 13:31
  • 123
    Tim, I respect you a lot and I'm sorry you are having a bad time. But you ask in a comment what to do when a mod leaks someone information and makes threats?...what about when an SE employee leaks info, and to the press no less, and without exaggerating endangers the well being of a user?...what then?
    – Lamak
    Oct 15, 2019 at 15:00
  • 55
    @TimPost "There will always have to be a system where we, in an emergency, can pull a lever to remove a moderator's access immediately." Understood. But are you implying that Monica's dismissal fell into that category? A lot of comments in this thread seem to be from people who are reading your answer that way. Please clarify!
    – PM 2Ring
    Oct 15, 2019 at 17:55

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