The case goes like this.
- A four year old node.js answer of mine is outdated. Quite possibly related to the fact that it is about node.js and four years old.
- A user approaches me in a comment: "
createCipher
is dangerous and deprecated, this answer should not be used in 2020.". At 190,000+ reputation we can assume the user has both lots of experience with the site itself and expertise in the question topic at hand. That user also is a moderator. - I invite the mod to provide a better alternative, because I have not been following along the changes in node.js libraries very much over the last four years and they and obviously know about something that makes the code in this answer dangerous. Everybody being able to contribute important information or corrections even to old content is a fundamental feature of Stack Overflow. It's at the heart of what makes this site so useful.
- Instead the mod downvotes my answer and walks away. (Nobody has interacted with that answer for four years, and then a comment and a downvote happen in a matter minutes. So, yes, the mod did it. There was nobody else around.)
So far, this is a common scheme. Some random person holds out a stick for you to jump over, and when you don't comply immediately, they downvote you, because you've had it coming. I think most people have seen that happen one way or another. The -1 doesn't bother me, and the answer is still at +13, I could shrug and move on.
Then again, it's not a particularly great way to interact with other people, and it does precisely nothing to improve the content on the site, so I would expect more of a balanced approach from a mod.
And now the conclusion:
- I ask the mod if they are being serious with pulling off this kind of poor interaction.
- The mod does not seem to like being called out and deletes my comment.
And here is where I draw the line.
Mods are regular users of the site, and if they think doing that "you jump when I tell you" thing is fine, they are free to do this. I would expect better, but it's how the site works, so no argument there.
But mods also hold couple of unique powers, such as deleting comments without any kind oversight, and I don't think they should use them to silently rid themselves of somebody who mildly inconveniences them while they do it. Nobody else gets to.
So the question is, was this supposed to go this way?