9:30 PM
@JeremyHolovacs Moderators disagree? Never. (Kidding). It's just as important for moderators to be on the same page as it is for the question to be handled correctly. Between the two, I'd rather the question be handled correctly than the moderators be on the same page -- but that's why Moderators should work together and borderline questions should be looked at by more than one moderator before action.
@TimStone Always Editing. Edit the question if you think it can be salvaged. If it can't be salvaged (and if you edit a lot of questions, you get a feel for what can be salvaged), then it should be closed and potentially deleted. People imitate the actions they see those that have 'power' take. If as a Mod you edit a lot of questions, people will hopefully see that as positive reinforcement to edit questions when they can.
@funkymushroom When you edit a question, you shouldn't change the intent of the question -- but there's a lot of leeway to make that question better for someone else that has that problem.
@waxeagle There have been very few flags that I've ever been borderline on. Most of the problems are visibly apparent. In situations where they haven't been, I've taken the following tack when flagging: "This question seems to have these problems. I feel like I need another person to validate the problems I see. Flagging this question for [closure, deletion] based on these reasons. "
@MichaelMrozek It makes me want to make doubly sure the actions I'm taking are correct. This feeds into taking borderline questions to the group [of moderators].
@JeremyHolovacs I've taken a different tack than others here. I've spent a lot of time editing questions, and only flagging when I was either out of close votes for the day, or when I wasn't sure I was making the right call (or I thought the question was egregious enough that it needed moderator attention). Most people flag and move on (I explain the reasons why I think that happens here:
meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/135774/…
@Shog9 I use them all the time; I use the /review dashboard the least (because with the number of flags we have, it takes some time to go through all of them during a workday). I'm very comfortable with them.
@YannisRizos For most sites it's pretty clear what belongs where -- we're at the point now where the migration paths are much clearer than they used to be, so it's not often that you'll see a question migrated to programmers. If there are borderline questions, either leave it in place or take it to the group.
@Kalamane define 'isn't exactly on topic'. If it's a "What's your favorite programmable [thing]", then that's a question that is really off topic. (Both as a list of X question, as a not constructive question, and as a question that's better posed on Reddit).
@BoltClock When the bounty was put on the question because the question was off topic and the OP put the bounty on the question so it couldn't be closed. That's when I'd do that. If we had more users that could handle the amount of traffic we need to handle for closing questions, then I may not -- but right now we have a lot of traffic, and not very many people [ratio wise] that vote to close questions that are demonstrably off-topic. Questions get through the cracks.
@TimStone I have a history of being on meta, participating, and seeing what the community sentiment is. I even try to post what I believe the direction should be. If I ever take an action that rubs the community (as a whole, instead of one user negatively affected), then I suspect there will be a very visible outcry on meta (as there would be if any mod did something like that). It's healthy, and I'll listen where needed.
@Aarthi I may be in the minority here, but I like to be open about the actions I take. There shouldn't be a question as to why I did something (If the reason is not evident, then I've failed). I am happy to make my case on meta, but as I've seen in the past, if you do something correct, and someone complains about it, the community will post their opinions. If you're in the 'right' then you'll be vindicated by the community.
@waxeagle They're allowed to ignore feature requests. If it's something that blocks me from doing my job as a moderator, I'll keep an active line of communication about it; but I don't expect the Dev team to implement anything just because someone says they need it. Since I'm a developer myself, I'd do my best to try to implement it, show them the value, and go from there.
@TimStone The role of a moderator is to make decisions in cases where the community can't (or doesn't have a consensus) and to remove actively harmful content from the site. As part of that, it's my 'job' to go through the flag queue, but I'm also there to see things as they occur. As a moderator, I'll follow the same process I do now: Try to salvage bad [but potentially good] questions, close blatantly bad questions, and ask other moderators about the borderline issues.
@Gilles Happens all the time (two answers with similar content). Let the community sort it out through votes. If the answerers are smart, they'll do things to differentiate their answers from one another (solving the problem themselves). There's really no way to say what is plagiarized unless it's a word for word replica. If it is, I'll talk to the user involved, but otherwise -- let the community handle it.
@jmort253 I normally come to SO during breaks in work (or during builds, or lunch) for the last (almost) four years. I haven't gotten burned out yet. I don't see that changing.
@KendallFrey It's been handled appropriately. It's locked because the answer is contentious. It's staying on the site because it's helpful and it's funny. It's so helpful because it is so funny. I don't see any reason to change that.
@YannisRizos Yes. Moderator chat; I haven't seen chat outside of that work too well (unless there's a specific question), but I would be in chat where needed.
@GraceNote Moderation is about taking the actions needed to keep the community clean. It's not unlike that of a janitor or gardener. It is not glorious work. It's not all about laying down the law, either. It's about doing the work necessary to keep the community going and thriving. Some days that means editing questions; others that means tracking down troublesome users; sometimes it means closing questions. Use the right tool for the job. I've done that since day one, and that won't change.
@Lix @BradLarson is a great example of someone who understands what it takes to be a moderator. He doesn't just flag potentially great (but problematic) questions, he works to fix them. We need more people like that on Stack Overflow. Don't ask others to do that which you're not doing yourself.