7 hours later…
07:52
@GraceNote Moderators handle those things that the community and automated systems can't (very well) handle themselves; things that are so exceptional that they need a faster and perhaps 'stronger' response than the community can provide, or a more nuanced response than automated systems can provide.
@AnnaLear I think I roughly covered this one, but one of my prime items to tackle with my 10k tools and flagging ability is spam and 'Not an Answer' posts; Down-voting these posts as answers is what is generally available to the community, but that does not completely remove them. Downvoting and voting to close (then eventually delete) is what the community could otherwise do to spam questions, but that can take a significant amount of time. These are good examples of items for Moderators.
@GraceNote I definitely think the most important job of a moderator is to do those things that only moderators can do. That really boils down to one thing: handle the moderator queue. As someone who puts a lot of things in there now, I think that is extremely important. Pretty much everything else a moderator should do - the community can also do.
@Shog9 My goal in becoming a moderator might be obvious, since I already put it in my nomination message: To stop giving the mods more work via my flags, but instead to handle them. Related to that, of course, is to directly handle those things I come across organically as I browse.
@NullUserException I expect that moderating will have some effect on my asking/answering, and that is OK by me. However, I already spend a significant amount of time doing 10k-related moderating tasks, and then answering things also as I come across them. I can see still doing that as I flip through the home page listing of questions.
@GraceNote My primary activity is likely to be, coincidentally, similar to right now; very early morning US Eastern Time, primarily on business days, and then sporadically throughout the day, 7 days a week.
@swasheck My reaction was absolutely positive to the Summer of Love as an idea, and certainly how it made me think twice before responding to things. I know that I've seen others who seem to have tried to 'moderate' themselves. Sometimes it can become a little frustrating responding to something for the umpteenth time, but we have to remember it's not the umpteenth time for all of those we're responding to. I don't know if the S.O.L. reached 'everyone', though.
@AnnaLear Having a diamond after my name will definitely make me think twice (thrice?) about everything I say and do, because I am no longer representing just myself. I already consider it important to represent myself well, but there are things that are OK for "me" which are possibly not OK for me as a Stack Overflow moderator. I plead the fifth on what those things might be...
@MadaraUchiha As a candidate, I feel they are all important. Although much has been made of my helpful flag count, I feel that my Meta participation possibly gives a better idea of what I'm really about. For flagging and voting, I think I more feel like there is a level that makes you 'acceptable', and it has meaning otherwise, but ultimately, that's just a number; what can you tell from just a number? For instance - what if my 9200+ Helpful Flags also included 5000 Not helpful flags?
@swasheck I would encourage those notable experts the same way I would encourage any would-be contributor to the site; We have people all over the place working to make the site better, all the time. Some of us - from 3k voters to 10k queue browsers to mods - who work on the 'negative' end; but we also need everyone to work on the positive end, contributing superb content; and we all appreciate it. Everyone.
@Neal That's easy as pie; I want to be a moderator because I have gained so much knowledge from this site precisely because it is moderated in the way it is. I really only became active about two years ago; had I been here from the start, I'm not sure how impressed I would have been with it, compared to other sources. But I'm here now, and I love how the community has decided to moderate things, overall; and I want to help with that.
@BradLarson I feel that closed questions should be deleted when their visibility does not serve any worthwhile purpose. Well-worded duplicates serve as signposts, for example, and should remain. Beyond that, I feel most closed posts which don't get reopened should be deleted; if it remains closed, it's because the community feels it lacks the quality to be here in the first place. Why should it, then, remain visible? There are exceptions, like those the community has decided are 'Historical'.
@GraceNote It's difficult to pick one. I so much wanted to list three here. But since you are making me pick one, I would pick @animuson. I think the 'raw data' available certainly more than qualifies him, but more than that, I have seen his Meta participation, and it makes me feel like his feelings about the site follow that of the community - and myself.
@NullUserException I think having that extra-powered Moderator vote to close is definitely a major ability, and I would exercise it very carefully. Right now, an 'incorrect' close vote is simply wasted (which is still a concern of mine, since I often use up all of my votes), but the more heavily my vote would count, the more extra-certain I would have to be.
@Shog9 I'll deal with Meta complaints about my actions as Mod in close to the same way I've dealt with it as the 'flagging user', though there is a major difference: I get to choose whether to 'out' myself as the flagging user, but I won't have that choice as a mod. Simple answer: explain why I made that decision, and be open to being wrong. And always remember that every moderator action needs to be defensible, in the first place, before I even do it.
@MadaraUchiha Quite often, questions flagged/voted for closing do not require domain knowledge. But they sometimes definitely do. The greatest type of flag/vote where this seems likely to occur is in 'Exact Dupes', and I am already shy about voting 'Close as Dupe' for those. If I don't know - and this applies to any flag - I leave it alone.
@swasheck Perhaps I have not learned this so much as had it reinforced, but I would definitely say that Stack Overflow shows that being precise about things is important. We're all supposed to be technically-minded people; askers and answerers, alike. We can't be expected to know every fact, but we should all know we get better results when we carefully explain what is important to an issue.
@MadaraUchiha I don't feel age should be an issue in choosing moderators, beyond them being of appropriate age to be on the site in the first place (13+). Beyond that, I don't care about their age. I want to know if they have a level head; if they know the difference between what they want and what the community wants, if they are able to take criticism, if they are patient, etc.
@Shog9 I definitely respect anyone who, as a moderator candidate, has shown that my massive 'Helpful Flag' count is not a be-all, end-all. There are other important metrics that I feel should be shared, such as close votes. We each concentrate in different areas, and I'm very glad to be among candidates who have differing - and superior - abilities and focus than mine.
@swasheck My 'go-to' tool for matters of moderation (speaking here of handling flags) would be my more experienced, fellow moderators. I have already learned a bit from them there (though @BradLarson has had to remind me of some things more than once re my most frequent reason for declined Spam flags), and I expect that to continue.
@Gordon I think it is definitely helpful to a candidate to have unlocked the 10k tools; I, for example, would not have the experience I do with flags if I did not have access to the "New Answers to Old Questions" list, which accounts for probably 99% of my flags and 80% of my votes-to-close. I don't think it's required, but it's more difficult for someone with less reputation to have been active enough to have enough of a record to consider.
@swasheck I am sorry to say that I completely miss the apparent joke, here. Who is Joe, and why does he deserve to be killed? And, the most important question: is someone flagging it?
@BradLarson I think that a high-reputation, subject matter expert who behaves in a bad way can be a significant drag on the site. Flags for them must be handled no differently than for anyone else, but it is perhaps more important to exercise some potential 'external' means to try to impress upon them the importance of being civil, due to their high profile.
@GraceNote I think the thing that makes me most uneasy is that I would like to never make a mistake as a moderator - but I know I will. I always try to take criticism constructively, but the perfectionist inside of me dies a little bit every time I "fail" in some way.
@rlemon Unicorns are the glue that holds us all together. I hope I have not offended anyone with visions of unicorns being sent to glue factories. I would never do such a thing. Unless the unicorn was old and weak. I feel like I am digging myself a hole here, so I am going to stop, before I also say that improperly-colored unicorns should probably also be made into some of the glue that holds this place together...
@swasheck If I am not elected a moderator, I will promptly go to my bouncy castle and throw a tantrum. Then, I will get back to flagging, voting, and Meta participation. Just like I did after the last two times I was not elected.
@GraceNote I have two major hobby interests beyond this sort of stuff; I play Airsoft (like paintball, but with look-alike replicas of real-life weapons, and 6mm plastic pellets instead of paint), and I am a GM of table-top RP games with a regular group of friends.
@RaghavSood One of my major tag-related crusades is watching the newly-created tags for misspellings, and obviously Meta tags (probably because my default 10k Tools view is the one that includes new tags at the bottom). My hope there is to try to prevent new tags from being tomorrow's train wrecks. Beyond that, I look out for current issues on Meta, and edit when I can.
@rlemon What to do with two users misbehaving in chat would first depend on the prevailing atmosphere of that chat room. Many flags would strongly suggest it is out of the accepted norm. My first hope would be to convince the two to take it somewhere private. If that needs to be done with a firmer hand, so be it.
@Shog9 For that specific answer, I delete it on the basis of being Spam, because that person is connected with the product, has no disclosed that fact, hasn't provided any context or helpful information, and has made multiple posts just like it. Also, though, I vote to close the question, as it is a typical 'shopping question'. As a mod, that means the question would be closed immediately. Finally, I think the question needs to be deleted.
@rlemon Chats are, admittedly, one of my weak points. I don't tend to be able to 'hang out' on the site enough to make chatting a frequent thing I can effectively do. I expect I would try to 'pop in' a bit more often, but I have to honestly say that kind of participation would not lend itself to 'getting to know' the chat community all that well.
@MadaraUchiha I don't think my viewpoint/vision, or chances of being elected are significantly effected. I think my views and activity are well-enough established/known and nothing here feels out of expectations, there. My biggest hope is that some who don't know me from Meta will get a better idea about me, knowing whether to vote for me, or not.
@GraceNote My final thoughts (though I see other questions coming!) are that I hope people can look beyond the simple fact of my flagging counts, and also see a tiny bit of what my hopes are for the site; to keep it of the highest-quality possible, so that it continues to be as helpful for people as it has been to me.
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