I am surprised at how forthcoming that The Register article is about specifics. I thought all parties were keeping details private out of mutual respect. It's an odd pivot when all the mods seemed to bend over backward to abide by their agreements. I don't mean to be inflammatory. It just seems unfair.
I think it's more that mods sign an NDA when they get their position, and hence are not allowed to be forthcoming legally. SO is not similarly constrained in its communication, and is instead free to choose what it thinks is right.
I mean, Teams is a step forward from Micorosft Link aka Skype for Business. But it's also definitely different software, and once you install Teams, it wants to control all Skype meetings...even if it can't.
I awe everyone an apology.
Events depicted in other answers are true.
Nothing can excuse it, there's just shame to have send this message.
I'm sincerely sorry.
To be honest, even though most aggressors seem recalcitrant at first, very often their behavior is a result of feeling unfairly treated, and at the root of that is misunderstanding and shame. If you can get past those, often you can discover their original good intent, and how things got off track.
@Sklivvz Yup! I remember way back before SO even had a meta site of it's own. But that's why I think the site specific meta's will remain (deal with site specific moderation and other issues) and the "global" meta will end up just being used by the staff to psot things.
Is it actually in the burn stage or in one of the pre-pre-pre-burn phases @BhargavRao? Every time I've tried to help with those things in the past, I got a nastygram from somebody about how I didn't wait until the "i"s were all dotted.
@Rob Yes, because it broke precedent, and important players let slip some key feelings about how they felt about their role in the site, and what they are expected to do.
@Rob It didn't "get out of control" it was presumably without moderators calling for assistance. Tim then stated "we don't have to say anything, full stop" which the validity isn't important, but the fact that they exercised they flexed power in this way with that mentality was. If you want to stop discussion about irrelevant politics, cool, but don't remove history of important actions SE has taken. If this event becomes important in the future it will be much harder to recall.
@opa it was getting out of control, and a RO timeout and a few kicks would've been warranted anyway. It was just coincidence that a diamond saw it first and decided to put it on an even more significant hold. It was pretty obvious that it would only be temporary until people understand what "drop it" means. I'm only expanding on this now so that you don't think there's a moderator or employee conspiracy here.
I as a regular user (and occasional room owner) believe that it was a bit on the heavy-handed side but reasonable.
(I'm OK with moving these messages to trash once the message is conveyed, to stop further meta-arguments from proliferating)
The post existing only attracts more non-constructive attacks. There's no value in keeping it. We'll all have the opportunity to express our concerns once a response is made in the coming days.
@AndrasDeak I'm saying it wasn't something non employee moderators couldn't have handled, we are using two different forms of "out of control" here. Apparently moderators themselves felt as much from Yvette's response and the mod responses on the employees post
@opa even room owners could have handled it (nipping it in the bud), it escalated none the less. What could have been is irrelevant. What was is an argument escalating and going nowhere, with participants refusing to drop it.
@AndrasDeak I'm not sure what the point of this response is, I'm not saying the conversation shouldn't have been shut down, heck, if a non employee moderator froze the thread, or specificallly called for CM's to freeze it, I wouldn't care. This isn't about the discussion being shut down, its about employees taking unilateral action to do so.