### [Cody Gray](https://stackoverflow.com/election/9#post-45237399) Denizens of Meta know that I tend to be rather wordy. However, there are a lot of candidates to consider in this election, so I've tried to respect your time and keep my answers as short as possible. That means they may not exhaustively cover the nuances of my thoughts and opinions, but they should get the point across. I'm a very reasonable and rational person, always open to new ideas and opinions. And although I *do* tend to have strong opinions—that I'm more than willing to explain and justify—I would temper those somewhat when acting in my official capacity as a moderator. My job would be to enforce standing site policy, not create new, *de facto* policies. >1. 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? No. Beyond the licensing terms set out in the user agreement, people have spent time answering the question and, in doing so, made positive contributions to the site as a whole. Their efforts should be respected. I would, however, be willing to remove any sensitive or personally-identifying information and anonymize the question so it isn't associated with the user's account. >2. Say you just performed a simple moderator action, like closing a question and leaving a comment explaining why. The question's owner disagrees with your decision, flags your comment as "no longer needed" and replies with a comment that should be flagged as "rude or abusive". Do you handle the situation yourself or do you wait for another mod to clean up? If you handle it yourself, do you just dismiss their flag, delete their comment and move on or do take further action? If someone has a problem with actions I've taken as a moderator—under virtually any circumstances—then no, I would not continue to handle the flags pertaining to that particular issue myself. We have plenty of other moderators, and we should all serve as a check on each other. Another moderator can process these flags and either uphold or rollback my actions. If necessary, the issue can be brought to Meta, where I can post a reasoned defense of my actions, others can agree or disagree with supporting logic of their own, and we can come to a consensus. That is, assuming I stand by my original action. If they're right and I totally goofed up (hey, it could happen!), I'll undo whatever my damage was and leave an apology comment. >3. Someone uses a custom flag to ask for a question to be migrated to another site. You're not a member of the target site. How do you decide whether or not to migrate the question? If the question is topical and otherwise suitable for Stack Overflow, it should stay here, so I won't migrate it. If it is *not* a good fit for Stack Overflow, then I would still err on the side of not migrating it. Other sites should not be a dumping ground for our unwanted questions. Of course, I'm not completely opposed to migration. If I evaluate the question and feel that it is a good question that would be an asset to another site, I would reach out to moderators (or trusted users) on that site and ask their opinions *first*. >4. Given a question that's closed as a duplicate of a fairly popular question (say a score of 10+, with multiple decent answers having a score of 5+), a gold tag badge user comes along, single-handedly reopens it and posts an answer that doesn't really differ that much from the ones in the duplicate. The answer or question is flagged by a user who disagrees with the reopening, stating the answer merely duplicates content already present on the site. What do you do? Assuming I agree with the flag, I would reach out to the user who posted the answer and ask why they thought this question merited reopening. Clearly, someone who has a gold tag badge knows how the site works and likely understands the problem domain better than I do, so I would tend to respect their judgment. But, I would still ask them to clarify, in hopes of making their answer more clear and/or the question more distinct. If it's clearly abusive behavior and/or they cannot provide a valid justification, I would deal with it by re-closing the question and merging their answer into the "master" question. >5. Do you have any Meta posts that you're particularly proud of, or that you feel best demonstrate your moderation style? Hmm. I don't have any that I'm *not* proud of. One thing I do feel strongly about is [fairness and consistency](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/332546/adopt-a-consistent-policy-on-what-requires-editing-means-in-the-review-queues). Another thing I feel strongly about is [making the site better](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/326868/lets-improve-stack-overflows-ask-a-question-page). I have [high standards for quality](https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/174097/is-it-time-to-tighten-up-the-question-quality-filter). If you have more time to kill, the list is in my profile. :-) Otherwise, I assume you either know me from my Meta answers already, or you won't be swayed. >6. 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? Well, some friction is inevitable, I suppose. I don't expect everyone to like me, and all good moderators are the subject of their share of epic Meta tantrums. I believe that Meta serves its purpose well. Actions you disagree with can be discussed, community consensus can be reached, and everything can be corrected with transparency. Everyone makes mistakes, and I'm certainly open to hearing differences of opinion. I would either need to be more careful in the future, or change my approach entirely. If it was just an ongoing clash with a particular user, I would try to let another moderator handle any future issues with him/her. I'm not going to let one user stop me from doing my job, but at the same time, there's just no point in the two of us constantly butting heads. >7. Moderators are expected to spend only 30 mins of their time, but we all know that 30 mins is insufficient. There are 2100 flags per day in the queue, a few of them needing 10~15 minutes. Most moderators spend way more than 30 mins and a few spend hours together. Would you be able to scale up your work time when the demand increases? Yes. I have a very flexible schedule. There are many days where I spend 6+ hours on Stack Overflow. Although I currently spend most of that time providing answers to questions (because I feel that is where I can make the most difference), if given the tools to make a real dent in the site's overall quality, I would *eagerly* dive in. I guess here is as good a place as any to comment on why I don't spend much time slogging through the "review" queues. First of all, as a regular user, I prefer to review "organically", as I come across problems in the tags where I am an expert. Second, I've been around a lot longer than the current review queues, and—like many of you—I am frustrated with their design and implementation. I'm no stranger to reviewing; I just do less of it now than I used to. Third, it quickly grows tiring and discouraging when you spend hours and hours slogging through garbage without seeing much of a payoff. It takes too many people to take out the trash, and it stinks an awful lot in the meantime. This is why I'm asking for moderator privileges: with these, I will be able to make a much more significant impact, and that would be a powerful motivation for me to put in more than my fair share of time. >8. Due to your status and actions as moderator and no matter how reasonable your conduct, you will be personally insulted more frequently, will have your competence questioned more publicly, and will be more exposed to negative sentiments. How will you cope with this negative pressure long-term when it comes from many users? I have no problem being called out, and although no one really *likes* it, I try very hard not to take things personally. When the criticism is presented rationally, I will *always* respond in kind, presenting my rationale and maintaining an open mind. Otherwise, I'll just ignore it. I might laugh a little, too. I hear that's good for the soul. >9. 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? It depends on the nature of the arguments/flags. I take a pretty laid-back approach to comments, and I try not to read too much into textual conversations. But certainly, if the flags were valid, this is something that would merit a private message to the user. It is often the case that people are unaware of how their remarks are being interpreted and are only inadvertently causing problems. Hopefully, we could work towards a solution that works for all parties. If a user is producing a steady stream of valuable answers, I would work *very* hard to keep them an active, productive member here, while still trying to balance the well-being of all our members. On the other hand, there is one case where I would take swift action, and that is when one user is personally attacking another user. I have absolutely no tolerance for that, and if a pattern of such actions were brought to my attention, it would merit an immediate [suspension](https://stackoverflow.blog/2009/04/06/a-day-in-the-penalty-box/). You simply cannot attack other people, use slurs, or otherwise engage in abusive behavior, no matter how *valuable* your contributions are. >10. How would you handle a situation where another mod closed/deleted/etc a question that you feel shouldn't have been? Umm, I would talk to them? :-) If we couldn't come to a consensus in a private (or semi-private) forum, I would bring the issue to Meta. I'd present my arguments for re-opening (or undeleting) the question, and I would ping the other moderator to share their thoughts as well. Then, I'd leave it up to the community to decide what should be done. I'm obviously not going to get into a close/delete war with another moderator, no matter how much fun that might be to watch.