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starball
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Warning: this question is broad, meandering, and stark.

I've gotten the feeling that being a moderator has lost some of its charm in the past year (probably in continuation of a much longer trend).

Here's what I've observed in the past year:

  • Site activity has declined significantly as many people have found that they would rather use LLMs than SO (SO itself has lost a lot of its charm in peoples' minds over several years, but especially so in the last year). In the minds of many of those people, SO is dead (at least to them. the vibe I get is "and good riddance! they deserve it- those jerks").

  • And yet- the current size of the moderator flag queue is record-setting, and the rules a moderator must follow to action most of those flags, which are on AI-generated content, are complicated, and still lacking in power, being still under development. Things are moving. Slowly. They could be moving much faster if the company would allocate more staff to cooperate, and give the detection-heuristics working group's members better tools to do their work. The members of that group (including me) have been pushing on, but I personally can't help but feel frustrated and sometimes a little defeated at how slow heuristics development is moving.

  • A significant population of people outside of the core SO community already had a pretty negative perception of SO moderators ("elitist", "power-hungry", etc), while not understanding what moderators do, and now on top of that, there's a perception of "technological-luddism" with the AI-ban especially in SE-external discussions about the mod-strike, and a view that SO should just accept and embrace an AIGC future.

  • As for members of the core SO/SE user community, some are completely fed up with the company (SO Inc.)'s actions, and are of the view that anyone that continues to want to curate the knowledge-base is out of their minds, and that (especially since several mods are still "on vacation" from moderating after the strike's resolution) people who want to take up the moderator mantle are egotistical, power-hungry company lapdogs, and that if you're really smart and a lover of what is good, you jump ship to greener pastures (no, I'm not sorry for mixing imagery).

So you want to be a mod. You want to keep protecting and developing the good that exists in this place in particular.

Despite the pain, despite what people will think of you, facing the long stretch of work ahead of you, why do you think this place is still worth it?- that it still matters? How does your perspective differ from the perspectives of all those people?

starball
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