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replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/

As shown on the moderators list, the new members are added to the group. In this case, in 2015, one moderator decided to step down and was removed.

I also point you to the accepted answer and discussion on Should Community Moderators be “elected for life”, or have terms? (on MSE). It states, in part, that replacing moderators instead of accumulating them would have the following impacts:

You would be effectively kicking out experienced moderators.

It would also mean that the moderating 'team' is split once a year. Which is also undesirable.

Moderating is pretty much the same person to person. Someone who is competent will not be too different from someone else who is competent. It's not like you can have different policies for which users can vote. The job is simply to enforce the terms and conditions of the site and some maintenance/tidying up.

Although Stack Overflow is meant to be community driven I am not sure on the idea on them worrying about community approval. Sometimes, not often though, it may be their job to be unpopular (say, closing a popular but wildly off-topic question).

Related: Should Stack Overflow moderators have a “standard of duty”?

William Price
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