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Andy Mod
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I'm Andy, and these are my answers (and here is my nomination post). I've tried to keep most of them short but informative. I know there will be a lot of text for everyone to read as more nominations come in.


  1. A 10k+ user regularly has their comments flagged as "rude or offensive" or "not constructive", to the tune of 4-5 flags a day. No comment by itself is particularly offensive, but their general tone causes them to be flagged by multiple users. You've contacted them privately about this, but they believe that they aren't doing anything wrong and that people are being too sensitive. The flags keep coming in on their comments. What, if anything, do you do next?

No one has an exemption from the Be Nice policy. I think the first step is to understand why nothing has already been done about the user. 4-5 a day seems like the user has moved beyond the "nuisance" stage. I think a temporary ban is appropriate, with another explanation as to what is expected when interacting with others. While some users are more sensitive than others, a stream of this many flags across an extended period of time doesn't lead me to believe the problem is with the community users.

  1. How would you, as a moderator, deal with a situation where a group of users unanimously disagree with your ruling while you're 100% sure you based your decision on the standing policy? What if your ruling was in a chatroom?

There is a process for both sides - community and moderator - to deal with these types of decisions. Meta is useful for airing these discussions. It's also a good place to politely educate a moderator in the ways they are wrong...or a moderator to educate the community in the policies they were following. Sometimes these policies aren't known by everyone. Sometimes they've evolved over time to mean something else. In either case, the discussion needs to take place.

The fact that this takes place in a chat room doesn't change the answer. Chat happens at a faster pace than meta. My goal when I've been involved in chat rooms is to engage in a discussion. If both sides can keep the discussion civil (and this does not mean that you have to agree with me or that I have to agree with you), I'll happily explain decisions that were made in chat.

  1. Not everyone agrees with every Stack Exchange policy, guideline, section of scope, etc. As a moderator, do you think you'll be able to effectively moderate and enforce Stack Overflow policies you may personally disagree with, but which the community strongly supports - or, as Aaroninus suggested, perhaps which you and the community disagree with?

Yes, I'll be able to effectively moderate. I disagree with guidelines at work, yet can effectively perform my job. I disagree with guidelines on Stack Overflow and can already effectively use tools I have at my disposal - downvotes, close votes, meta posts - to perform community moderation tasks. As a moderator, I will be able to moderate the same way.

  1. A user vandalises their post and enters a "rollback war", trying to change it to simply read "QUESTION REMUVED FOR PRIVACY". They had also submitted (rejected) suggested edits to do likewise to the answers. By the time you see it they've also flagged or commented on the question: Please delete this ASAP, it's super urgent that I remove this because my university honor code demands that I do and I'm going to get kicked out The question was pretty poor to begin with, but received 3 decent answers and had been edited a little before the vandalism started. What do you do?

I do not delete the question. Unfortunately, for the poster, by posting the question they licensed it to Stack Exchange under the CC-SA. However, I will explain that they do have a few options. Option 1 is to request disassociation from the specific post that may get them in trouble. This removes their name from the post. Option 2 is to change code in the specific post to something more generic that still exhibits the problem the question is focused on. A combination of these two options may be appropriate as well. In rare cases, it's appropriate to ask for the original revision to be deleted.

If the question and answers are not good (ie. everything is down voted), I'm more willing to remove the entire post from the site. I do not like the idea of removing multiple good answers simply because someone didn't realize they can't post proprietary code on a public web site.

  1. Please explain, in your words, the difference between these flags: NAA and VLQ. How would you act on a "NAA" answer which is flagged as VLQ, or vice versa?

Not an answer (NAA) are for answers asking new questions, providing one line of troubleshooting help, or posting a link to another site with the note that "this tutorial helped." Very Low Quality (VLQ) answers are posts like "You should look at fancyMethod" (maybe with a working link to fancyMethod). Technically, if the user squints or spends enough time reading the linked documentation, it does answer the question. But...it sucks as an answer. This is different than "try this tutorial", because it contains just enough information to be slightly helpful.

NAA flags should be acted on by deleting the answer. Very low quality takes little bit more brain power. Theoretically, it could be corrected. But, if the post has existed for months and is lingering at a zero score or lower (especially when there are upvoted, competing answers), I think it can be safely deleted. If the post is newer, I'm more likely to downvote and comment.

  1. Moderation sometimes entails seeing some questionable content. Are you willing to take that risk? If you'll be moderating at your workplace, do you have a corporate filter that will take issue with this?

I have participated in the Smoke Detector/Charcoal community spam detection project for a couple years. I've seen spam, inappropriate content, and questionable content from my work machine behind a corporate firewall countless times. It has yet to tell me that I'm a horrible person.

  1. You impose a temporary ban (say 1 week) on a user for what you judged as reasonable and valid reasons (the user gets notified by email of your action and the reason). The user replies to your email acknowledging the transgression, says they won't do it again and asks for the ban to be lifted. The user sounds genuine. Do you remove the ban? Do you even reply at all? Explain your reasoning. The context of this question applies to longer bans too. If it helps get the juices flowing, consider the situation of a second offence for the same behaviour, which has a default ban period of 1 month.

I have two answers for this question, based on the user's history. If this is a first offense, up to this point the user hasn't been pushing limits and attempting to disrupt others, and the ban isn't related to voting fraud, then I'd be willing to remove the ban. Sometimes a ban is put in place to get the user's attention. Once the situation has been resolved, the ban is no longer appropriate and should be removed.

On the other hand, if the user has a history of crossing the line and looking for a reaction, or if the ban is related to vote fraud, I'd simply not reply and the user will return in a week. Stack Overflow has enough "voting irregularity" bans, that I imagine the responses to such bans are all similar (and invalid). I see no reason to change that policy.

  1. Do you have any Meta posts that you're particularly proud of, or that you feel best demonstrate your moderation style?

I'm proud of many of my posts on Meta.SO and around the network. Here on MSO, two that I am particularly proud of are:

In both of these, you can see that I care about quality on Stack Overflow. I've spent time analyzing the problem, as I see it, and present my findings to the community. I participated in the discussions that both posts generated.

Elsewhere on the network, my participation in meta has helped to shape communities. For example, on Hardware Recommendations, my meta post about "What type of hardware is allowed" helped to set the scope of what the community accepts as on topic hardware. I've also helped to set up the high quality guidelines for questions and argued against certain types of tags and hardware.

With all of these, I've presented my arguments and logic and strived to remain professional. I believe the community on HardwareRecs has seen that as well.

As a moderator on Community Building, I've been involved in many discussions. I was involved in the discussions to rename the community from Moderators.SE to CommunityBuilding.SE. I've been involved in discussions about slow growth of the community. I've also presented arguments that go against other moderators, and walked away still feeling like a moderation team.

On Open Source, I made a post about how moderators had implemented a policy to watch the reviewers. It was similar to the long removed "flag weight" option that used to exist. I believe the post was presented in a way that questioned the decisions of the moderators, yet remained professional.

I think, through these meta posts across the network, you can pick up on my moderation style and personality. I like data and I try to present my thoughts in a way that is understandable to all. I'm also willing to speak my mind, but want work with those involved as we try to solve the problem.

  1. 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?

This is a two step process, but I don't know if the community would ever see any of my actions. The first step would be to get a second/third/forth opinion from other moderators. Am I doing something wrong? If so, I'd need to adjust what I was doing. Assuming it's required, I'd also apologize to the user and explain what I'd be changing in the future. However, if the other moderators don't think I'm doing anything wrong, we move to the next step. Stack Overflow has many moderators and they don't work in isolation. To avoid a conflict of interest, I'd request another moderator handle the response to the user.

  1. 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?

No one has an exemption from the Be Nice policy. The posts are valued but the behavior isn't. I'd encourage the user to adjust the behavior. If this doesn't work (or hasn't worked repeatedly over a period of time), then a series of escalating bans - which is the common policy - would take place. With these bans, a mod message explaining that their behavior isn't acceptable would be sent, regardless of the quality of their posts. While it's unfortunate to lose a user that has contributed good content, if they are driving away other users with their behavior it makes sense to eliminate the problem. A toxic atmosphere of abusive comments should not be something a user of any level of experience has to deal with.

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

There is only one way to handle this: talk with the other mod. I'm certainly not a mind reader and I'm guessing they aren't either. I'll take a few minutes to talk with them about my concerns, listen to their reasoning and, I imagine, we'll come to some kind of agreement on what to do with the post.

Andy Mod
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