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deceze's answers

  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?

Once content is posted on Stack Overflow, not only does it belong to Stack Exchange and the public in general, but it will also almost certainly have already been dispersed throughout the internet (caches, Google, third parties using the Stack API etc.). Even if removed from Stack Overflow proper, the content will almost certainly continue to live in a thousand places. That's the first thing I'd need to tell that asker.

Unless there's a clear security or privacy problem (sensitive details posted in the question), there's little reason for Stack Overflow to remove any content. This would be quite an exception and would require some very good reasoning. I'm sorry, but if you've been caught getting your homework done by SO, then it's your problem for letting SO do your homework in the first place.

  1. You notice an experienced, high-rep user who has started a pattern of rude, not-constructive borderline abusive comments directed at users. How do you proceed in this situation?

Surely such things never happen! :-O
Well, okay, unfortunately they do. The first step here is obviously to try to talk to the person in question and point out that their behaviour is uncalled for. Ideally it'd be possible to talk the person down back to a normal behaviour. Everyone can blow a gasket every once in a while; it's unfortunate if it happens in public, but that's life.

If the user's behaviour continues and has a seriously detrimental effect on the community, then we'll have to erect security barriers between the community and that user; i.e. timed suspensions. It is very unfortunate when it comes to that, but you can't risk the health of the community over one person's eccentricities, however well respected they may have been.

  1. A valuable member of the community starts vandalizing their posts and deleting them, what do you do? Do you step in and suspend? If you don't suspend them, then how do you handle it?

Very close to the case above. Figure out why they're doing it and explain to them why it's bad. Hopefully this will suffice. It's anyone's prerogative to remove content they have contributed (within limits), that's what the delete buttons are there for. However, if a user does this en masse it may indicate that they misunderstand the purpose of SO, so clearing out any misunderstandings there is first priority.

I'd be very reluctant to pull a suspension trigger here, since the user is only vandalising their own content. But if it demonstrably affects the community (e.g. canonical, often cited references gone), it may have to come to this.

  1. A new user has gotten into a disagreement with a more experienced user over a question closure, and complains that the site is "unfriendly to newcomers." How do you respond, if at all?

New users often misunderstand SO's model and mistake it for a help forum. Clearing out that misunderstanding with the new user is first priority. This case takes a bit of domain knowledge though. If the closed question clearly has answers elsewhere or does otherwise fit any of the established close reasons, then what happened is fine and the user needs to be nudged into understanding that; alternatively they need to be asked to peruse the existing content and improve their question to make clear why it's supposedly different. Only if the question was legitimately closed in error and there really is a case to be made for it to reopen should it be reopened.

  1. A user has been flagged for making a series of "trivial" edits. How do you decide whether these edits are a problem? How do you act on that flag?

This greatly depends on the level of "triviality". Editors which more or less randomly intersperse backtick markers are often unwanted; this rarely provides actual improvement, is sometimes destructive and can easily be seen as mere digging for points. However, discouraging certain types of grammar nerds is a bad idea, those can very well be a plus for the community. If the edits provide a real improvement, they're good, however trivial.

If they're really superfluous, the user should get a friendly talking to. If they're outright unwelcome, a bunch of rollbacks and a very close look at the rest of the user's activities are in order.

  1. A user had done a veeery long series of Looks OK flags in Low Quality Posts without editing anything. What would you do?

Hopefully the audit mechanism should catch that particular type of behaviour. If it doesn't and the issue is brought to the attention of moderators, the first question is why the user is even bothering doing what they're doing. If the rest of the user's activities do not reveal any particular issues, this is hardly any offence. However, a friendly message pointing out their possible lack of scrutiny may be in order. If the rest of their profile does show irregularities, then this may just be the tip of the iceberg and anything could happen...

  1. A user continuously calls you out for your moderation style on Meta, Chat, and other venues. How do you react? It could be anything, really. It's happened to every moderator. The specific most recent instance of being called out isn't as important as the fact that as a moderator, you have a shiny target on your back; how do you handle it when some of the most vocal users decide to continuously shoot rubberbands at you?

Every superhero needs an archenemy, don't they? ;)
As long as it's harmless quips, I've got a pretty thick skin. If it starts getting disruptive... you may have noticed that I'm a fan of trying to talk it out, so that'd be a first step. There's nothing much to be done really beyond that if it stays at a personal level and has no broader consequence to the community as a whole. You can't be liked by everybody equally.

  1. You are an experienced user, and have been a member for several years. You know how the site works and the problems moderators and trusted users have to deal with. But tell us, why today instead of last election (if you hadn't ran last election)? Why today instead of next election? What has driven you to nominate and stand up to the task now? Are you confident your intent can and will remain the same in the mid future?

I am not particularly power hungry and didn't particularly covet the position of a moderator as such. My personal life was also fraud with international household moves, babies born, work to do... as such I wasn't particularly keen on taking on even more tasks. However, turns out, I'm on SO a lot anyway, and I'm mostly closing questions and leaving meta comments and flags. And I'm getting very little flak back, so it appears I must be doing something right. It's actually gotten to a point where not having moderator tools feels inefficient sometimes. Personal and work lives have stabilised, so... might as well.

  1. When reviewing recently deleted posts and current posts with deletion votes, you begin to notice a pattern. A group of users is consistently present for deletion votes, and some of the deletions begin to cause meta posts questioning the validity of the certain deletions. The deletion set gets so big that some high profile posts are being deleted. How would you address this situation?

This sounds like a scenario orchestrated by many individuals, and will likely require many individuals to resolve and clean up. It first needs to be brought to the attention of the moderator/meta community. If the origins of this "ring" can be traced back collaboratively so it can be cleaned out, all the better. Otherwise we'd better hope we don't have to play whack-a-mole with this for a while.

  1. Before elected mod, you used to hang out in one of the SE chat rooms and continue to do so after being elected (ok, not so active as before, your new duties and adjusting to them take some of your time now). You consider "regulars" there to be your friends. One of them has the habit of posting witty/snarky comments under SO questions and re-posting them in the chat room - for your friends' notice, and sometimes amusement. The comments are not inherently bad, on the contrary they are often pointing on the questions' misconceptions or lack of useful info. But they can be taken as snark and are sometimes flagged.
First, what do you do, what action do you take if any? Second, do you tell, announce to your friend and others what you did? If they have their comments repeatedly deleted, they will notice of course, but they will not know who did, only guess, probably. The point of this second part is not only whether and how your friendship will affect your actions but how you will deal with the consequences of your actions and the effects of them to your friendship.

This is a very hypothetical question, since I'm rarely active in the general chat indeed. Not because I dislike people, but because a general group chat is very counterproductive to my work day. I certainly wouldn't be going around the back deleting comments; I'm not going to play whack-a-mole with them on SO. I have a certain professional face which I don while on SO; if they do not choose to do the same that's up to them. Whether or not that would influence any relationship remains to be seen.

  1. For handling NAA flags: What constitutes an answer to a question? Do answers need to answer the question, or just address the question to avoid being possibly deleted under the above criteria? Does it matter if the question is really old when the standards were different? Where are users and reviewers expected to find this information?

This always requires a bit of domain knowledge, intuition and tact... sometimes the real answer runs entirely contrary to what the OP may have been asking. Even if an answer appears to go off the rails, it may sometimes be exactly what the OP needed to hear. As such, an answer isn't simply "NAA" just because it points in a different direction than the OP. It's up to the answerer's peers to up- or downvote the answer to judge its usefulness.

An answer is clearly not an answer if it's gibberish, contains no content once any links have been removed or is clearly something other than an answer (spam, a new question, feedback etc.). The general criteria can be found here: https://stackoverflow.com/help/deleted-answers

  1. How would you handle a situation where another mod closed/deleted/etc a question that you feel shouldn't have been?

Unless there was a strong case made for closing the question and if I have a good case for reopening the question, I'll do so while leaving a comment for my reasoning. If necessary I'll edit the question to be clearer. This is hardly different from the regular modus operandi involving Mjølnir wielders, unless there was a particular reason why specifically a moderator closed the question. Moderators are still also regular hi-rep users and domain experts.

deceze Mod
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