Examples of election FAQs I can help with: - what is an election - how to nominate myself - how to vote - who should I vote for - how is candidate score calculated - what is my candidate score - what are the moderation/participation/editing badges - what is the election status - when is the election starting/ending - when is the next phase - how many positions are elected - who are the candidates - who are the current mods
A quick message from my sponsors: The election is in the nomination phase, and currently there are 4 candidates. I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
Why not to elect the four candidates and finish the elections? The four candidates are quite trusted. Questions coming are a lot, there's more trash than ever before, so we need more moderators than before, right? Stack Overflow isn't like when it was in 2011.
@KevinM.Mansour workload / time it takes to handle flags / availability of mods / complexity of flags. Just blindly adding more hands is in general bad advice. Why stop at 4? Just add another 8 or 16. It is not a guessing game. Please don't make it look like one.
@rene In general, same problem as adding more people to anything. It doesn't necessarily mean things get done faster or better. And there is time to onboard them, too. The classical example that 9 women don't deliver a baby in 1 month.
Interrupting to bring you this important message: The election is in the nomination phase, and currently there are 4 candidates. I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
@KevinM.Mansour here is the why: meta.stackexchange.com/a/184258 so we're back to my initial response: data probably shows that adding two mods is enough for now. Without internal insight arguing for 1, 2, 3, 4 or more slots doesn't make much sense.
I don't get why all the words "python" which are bolded and part of an error message description link to javascript.com. Like, all of them. I've opened 10 articles so far and they are all "Here is how to solve <some error> in python" and the word is always a link.
@Jean-FrançoisFabre Yeah. I have the same problem. Which is similar to IRL elections but also sort of the opposite, since in those I have to choose who I like the least to vote for. Here I have to choose who I like the least to not vote for. It's weird.
more seriously, having run first is a pretty good edge on "new" candidates. You know pretty much what went wrong and usually people don't keep records of your past actions too if they're ancient enough. Doesn't seem to be the case for you I suspect some conspiracy...
you also know how to "polish" your nomination and get more experience answering the questionnaire.
All that makes you a better candidate. Does that make you a better moderator?
You learn moderation by moderating. We need decent people, balanced, not angry or frustrated, who don't take things personal, even when downvoted. And who will process flags
Breaking news!!! The election is in the nomination phase, and currently there are 4 candidates. I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
Technically, "there's some of those in the list" isn't the same as "a subset of the list are those". And "there's some of those in the list" more accurately means there are more of those and they are not in the list. Which I'd say cannot be taking a side either.
Being popular doesn't make you a better moderator, but if you are popular then that's a good indication you would be a good moderator, you don't get popular by being bad
@user1271772 I tried to explain that: Everyone that wants to nominate has likely seen there's an election. Or you do think that someone that really really wants to be a moderator somehow missed it?
@user1271772 There are two positions and four choices, seems fine to me. More choices doesn't necessarily make better mods, and we need highly motivated mods so someone that doubts and needs more than a week to decide might not be the best candidate.
I've been following elections across the network and many of them have had the nomination period extended by a week or two, and this very often did result in more nominations (enough for the election to go forward and not have to be extended by another week).
@user1271772 Yes, well.. I think something else may be at play here. Lets say there are only two candidates and I really want them both to be moderators, but we need three candidates to go ahead. Then I might nominate myself just to make the election take place. But that doesn't mean I want to be a moderator at all. (Maybe I'll write a horrible nomination post and hope no one votes for me)
@ErikA Often I see that the first person to nominate themselves (I'm not saying it's true in this particular election!) is one of the most narcissistic and/or power hungry, and people that nominate themselves after the deadline is extended, tend to be far more humble and modest people who eventually get coaxed into nominating themselves because so many people who love them manage to finally convince them.
@ErikA I don't agree with that. There's dozens of mods on SO. Mods serve more purposes than just handling flags, and indecisive about running for mod is not the same as indecisive for treating a flag.
And not nominating yourself doesn't mean "indecisive" it might mean other things.
@Scratte That is one example of a scenario that could happen, but often it's not actually the case. I can give you examples of elections that went ahead where that third nomination became the elected mod.
@user1271772 Did you ask them if they like being a moderator? Or if they actually wanted to be one in the first place? Or if they felt pressured into it?
In one case I was one of the many people (including diamond mods) who convinced the user to step up, and eventually he was elected and now he's the most active mod (the only one that participated in certain polls and such).
@user1271772 Because in my scenario if people were to vote on me and I'd become a moderator, I'd feel pressured into also taking the time every day to moderate. And if I already knew I didn't want that, it would be my daily hour of "Urgh!.. I hate my life!"
His reason for not nominating himself was that he didn't have enough time, but when I showed him that he'd actually done more reviews than all of the diamond mods combined, he felt more convinced that he was already putting in the time!
"I'd feel pressured into also taking the time every day to moderate" - I mean, that's a fault of your own, you're not required to do anything in a situation like that, in fact you can just turn around and decline to sign the mod agreement
Let me turn the question around, since the only arguments I've seen here was that "anyone one deserving/worthy of the position, would already have nominated themselves": What would be the harm in leaving it open for 1 more week?
Nominating other people is fine in reality, because they can turn around and say "no", but that's also the exact reason why we don't do it, because it's a waste of time
I call it sacrificing oneself for the common good. You call it foolish..
But on a side note: This is a good reason to not review or edit or do any moderatoin, no? Because it just comes back to "If you did it, you must have enjoyed it".. which isn't always the case. Lots of people do it because they feel it must be done and they feel they need to also do their part.
I'm sorry to say this, but... The election is in the nomination phase, and currently there are 4 candidates. I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
@DanielWiddis So, what is your opinion on the continued, widespread use of the RGB colour system, knowing (as I'm sure you do), that it can't accurately represent the "seven standard" colours of the rainbow? (Indigo and violet being the problem shades.)
@Someone_who_likes_SE I was just complaining about how we didn't have enough candidates (we had 6 last year, and 11 the year before that, and 13 the year before that, and we used to get dozens). I'd be happier if there was a 6th!
People like me spend a lot of time already moderating and cleaning up this site. I am not very interested in spending a lot of time with single users. Your answers suggest that you would be more involved and more interactive with users.
A quick message from my sponsors: The election is in the nomination phase, and currently there are 5 candidates. I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
Accounts have to be personal account, so you can't even do it over an shared account. But I believe some bots feel that they'd like to have been elected along with their parent :)
@Dharman A single person may have multiple profiles on the site. So long as there is no interaction between them, no rules are broken. If both profiles are eligible to run in moderator elections (and there are such profiles), then running with either one of them should be permitted (but not both in the same election, of course). A quick search on MSE and MSO doesn't find any results for this specifically, but I may have missed it.
It's not about interaction, it's about using multiple accounts to do stuff you can't do stuff with a single account. Like voting twice on the same post, that would include voting twice in the same election
@AdrianMole I believe the intent is one vote per person. So if profile A is running, profile B could cast a vote for the other profile, so long as profile A doesn't also vote for itself. Basically, what Nick said (and linked to).
My understanding is different because of the way that election vote counting works (it only goes on to your next choice of your current choice is discarded). If one of the accounts uses even one of their 3 choices (not even necessarily all of them) the second account cannot vote for anyone in the election.
Because if they do then you've effectively used 2 votes
Breaking news!!! The election is in the nomination phase, and currently there are 5 candidates. I can answer commonly-asked questions about elections (type @ElectionBot help for more info).
Examples of election FAQs I can help with: - what is an election - how to nominate myself - how to vote - who should I vote for - how is candidate score calculated - what is my candidate score - what are the moderation/participation/editing badges - what is the election status - when is the election starting/ending - when is the next phase - how many positions are elected - who are the candidates - who are the current mods
@Someone_who_likes_SE You are not eligible to nominate yourself in the election as you do not have at least 3000 reputation. You are also missing the required badges: Convention, Strunk & White. Your candidate score is 9 (out of 40).
@AdrianMole if you seriously want to be a mod someday, I suggest you try to run, get a good beating, come back, get another beating, and finally get elected. Disclaimer: The number of beatings may vary
My first nomination text sucked. I also had a lot to learn.
I went past the primary (there were 11 candidates) but ended up 9th on 10 candidates. Ouch.
Another interesting thing that we don't have anymore is the votes on the answers to the questionnaire. It's better to answer in the nominations, on the other hand people don't get to react to the answers. Not meaning that the best answers ensure a win, but it helps figuring things out.
Maybe things will improve in the future. But I know that SE doesn't want to invest too much money on the election UI and I can understand that. Better spent on daily basis site features
@Jean-FrançoisFabre You could also argue that the votes on the questionnaire should not be there exactly so people need to figure it out for themselves instead of just looking at the vote score on it.
That's also true. But I think that wasn't the main idea. The idea was to avoid troll nominations. If you answer the questionnaire, that's already a feat