3:27 AM
@wim Yes, of course. Not saying that you did. Aside from the fact that the Python room has a pretty high degree of visibility and a significant mod presence anyway, I happened to see your complaints and took them seriously, because (A) this kind of thing matters to me, and (B) you're someone I consider to be a very valuable contributor here, and that makes me take an even closer look.
@wim Yes, your complaints have been heard, and this is what I'm paying attention to now in order to see if I can establish a problematic pattern of behavior. I personally think removing from RO is a pretty drastic step, so I'd try to have a discussion with the particular RO first and try to make adjustments to the behavior.
ROs need to be allowed to kick users for posting content that they consider to be annoying, obnoxious, distracting, rude, etc. That's one of the only powers that ROs have, and it's an important one to maintain this feature. Now, obviously, if they're abusing that power, that's a big problem. But to complain about the use of that power just doesn't go very far with me.
@wim I think it still is the place to discuss the issues, and I welcome you to continue doing so, because discussion of any issue is important. Even if nothing else, bringing some awareness to it will help the other ROs and the regulars watch out for it, raising an alarm and supporting you with examples if it continues/starts happening again.
I don't really know about the stars thing. There is probably a way to check that, but chat's moderator tools are especially inscrutable, and I'm not the expert. So that's the kind of thing I'd prefer to just let go. Arguably, starring comments like that one could be said to themselves be throwing fuel on the fire. I wouldn't jump to conclusions like there are ROs acting with bad intentions or trying to cover things up.
@wim This is an interesting point. I wonder if holding RO elections is something that should be considered. It would be a somewhat less formal process, but following similar rules to the SO mod elections in terms of who can vote.
@wim This is something that I consider to be a major problem, and precisely why I got involved in this in the first place. If you, as a highly valuable contributor and what seems to me to be a completely reasonable, level-headed, intelligent person, don't feel welcomed in the Python room, then something has gone wrong. Whether it's a systemic cultural problem, or an isolated incident, or just some bad blood... I don't know. But that doesn't make it any less of a problem.
@wim I obviously don't know what the original intent was, but I think it should be both. You definitely need a place to move "meta" discussion out of the main room, and that place might as well be the same place where you host "meta" discussion. So if you have concerns or criticisms that you don't mind making public, then here is a good place for them. (If they shouldn't be public, a moderator flag is appropriate.)
The feedback channel definitely can and should be able to enact changes, but we have to remember that not all feedback should lead to changes.
Regarding the "help vampire" thing... that's a tricky problem, and I understand both sides. The behavior that gets referred to as "help vampirism" can be a real drain on the energy and enthusiasm of room regulars. It can make the room not a fun place to hang out, and thus decrease its appeal. This is Andras's argument, and I know from experience that it is true. The individual use of the 'ignore' feature is not a good solution, both because of general problems that I have with an...
...'ignore' feature, and also because the "help vampires" are going to be annoying to folks who haven't yet figured out who to ignore. Room owners need to carefully and gingerly shut this kind of thing down before it becomes a problem, just like any other behavior that becomes a distraction and/or is annoying. It's just another standard of behavior that they are called upon to enforce.
At the same time, I agree with you that the use of the term "help vampire" can be problematic, and inside jokes like "garlic" are even worse. The latter needs to stop. The former should probably be replaced with a better, friendlier term. I'm open for ideas on that; I don't know of a good one off the top of my head.
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As Andras said, the behavior is the problem, not the person, but we do need to be more careful and deliberate about making that clear.
For the inside jokes and subtle put-downs, perhaps a good way to deal with that is just to create a canonical reference in the FAQ that ROs could point to, without having to type out an explanation each time. Typing out that explanation gets tedious, and leads to a strong tendency to use abbreviations, make inside jokes, snide references, etc., both out of convenience and an attempt to maintain one's own sanity. I know this from personal experience. It isn't the fault of individual ROs.