My biggest pet peeve about Stack Overflow's Gamification system is that it gives moderation privileges (which don't need any or very little technical knowledge) to people who have technical knowledge regardless of if they know anything about moderation.
You could have never edited someone else's post in your life and you would be given the privilege to instantly apply edits given that you have enough knowledge about some technical topic that has absolutely nothing to do with editing posts.
On the other side of the coin you could have edited hundreds of thousands of posts, participated in numerous reviews, have been active every single day on Meta for years on end but if you don't have enough technical knowledge you are neither getting any appreciation nor any privilege for all that you have done for this site.
One example of such a low rep user that comes to my mind is Jeanne Dark who has ~1k rep, has answered 8 times and has 0 questions but has cast 70,052 votes, raised 24,724 helpful flags, has 3 Steward badges, is very active on Meta, SOCVR and other chat rooms and has a lot of knowledge about Stack Overflow's workings.
An idea that has been on my mind for months now was to allow low-rep user with exceptional participation in the moderation effort and with a good track record of participation on meta to receive higher privileges without having enough reputation.
You know... like moderators/staff. They could have a symbol like the moderator diamond ♦ (a spade symbol maybe ♠) and could be designated with some title to avoid confusion ("elevated user" probably ¯\_(ツ)_/¯).
My idea was that these privileges could be given either automatically (say after crossing a certain threshold of number of actions, like the 2k privilege awarded for 1k accepted edits) or they could be awarded on a case-by-case basis (like the moderator elections but perhaps not on as large in scale and not sitewide... say, just here on meta (like tag burnination posts)... the user (or perhaps by someone else on their behalf, as a show of appreciation) would request a higher privilege via a meta post and after thorough background checks and enough votes from people here they will be manually upgraded to one step higher on the privileges list).
I think this will have the following benefits:
- This will show appreciation for people who have relentlessly helped in the moderation effort and empower them with tools to create a greater impact. And will make reviewers in general to feel more appreciated on this site. Perhaps even bring back people who have given up on moderation.
- It will motivate other low reputation users to participate more in the moderation effort causing them to in turn learn more about how Stack Overflow works (less off-topic questions because they themselves know what is on-topic, etc).
- This will increase the total number of reviewers/editors/vote casters we have on the top of the "food-chain" (More people who can see deleted posts, more people who can cast close votes and so on).
- It will increase participation here on Meta.
- This won't affect the existing reputation system as no reputation is being awarded.
- Unlike moderators these users would have little to no pressure over them to use their newly awarded privileges. They could either use them or wear them as a badge and keep doing whatever they were doing.
- I feel that it is highly unlikely that such privileges will be misused because the people who put all this effort for no personal gain have the best of Stack Overflow in their minds.
- Any misuse of their awarded privileges could be raised here on meta by other users and would lead to the termination of their "elevated" status and the retraction of said privileges.
Some issues that I see with this idea:
- It will increase the workload on Meta.
- It might (well, you know it will) cause conflicts.
- It will require an entire set of guidelines to be put in place (like tag burnination) to decide who qualifies and who doesn't.
- It might not make any significant dent because such user are few and far between (although I still think that they should be rewarded in some way).
What are your views on this?
Note: I am not asking this for myself. I have nowhere near that level of participation & effort. And I am neither that active nor looking to be that active with moderation. Also note that I mentioned Jeanne as an example (they are the best example I have) and they have no part in this. They might or might not have any interest in this proposal, I don't know. I haven't asked them.