@Scratte No! Not even hypothetically. Only a mod can undelete a mod-deleted post. But I'm not sure if CM-deleted posts have an extra level of ... whatever it's called.
Yes, but I'm afraid then Dharman will just get censored :D
To be honest.. every time an answer on a post that is not rude and not attacking anyone gets deleted on meta, I just want to log out and not log in back again.. ever.
@Scratte That...can happen, yes. I don't expect it to happen, though. I think it's more likely that a CM would answer with something like "wasn't constructive or valuable feedback".
This question concerns the following answer deleted an hour ago by one of the SE employees.
https://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/398452
<10k screenshot
I understand that the post was written in a slight tongue in cheek manner, so maybe the company decided it crossed the line when it comes to being fr...
@VLAZ The whole point about downvotes on such Meta posts is that they're not personal, or in any way reflective of the poster. They just express genuine disagreement with the suggestion/request.
@pkamb I know all too well. I made the same argument to others in my organization, who still release software that requires Windows 7 and has not yet been certified to operate on Windows 10.
@VLAZ How would anyone use the reaction features? Create a bunch of sockpuppets, skip the "gain a trivial amount of rep" phase, and award "thanks" to dozens of your own posts.
@AdrianMole She's still around. There are, I believe, 4 CMs now.
Oh, and then there's also Nicholas Chabanovsky, but he's not really active on SO. He mostly handles the Russian and other foreign-language sites, I think.
She learned a lot from Shog, both when she got elected community moderator on the only other site that might be close to as much of a trial-by-fire as SO itself (Interpersonal Skills), and then even more after she got hired by the company as a CM.
And I can vouch that she definitely "gets it", something which I was recently reminded that Shog himself said about me when I ran for moderator.
That "getting it" thing is irreplaceable, and highly valued.
I'd like to think that everyone who is active on meta learned at least something from Shog. Not even directly but indirectly. He has a way to be influential in the best way possible.
Yeah, JFF and I both saw the flag from an employee last night. I hot-potatoed it; JFF declined it. I was happy to see that. Then, I came in just a short while ago to find Cesar discussing it with SO mods in the private SO mod room, saying he felt strongly it should be deleted.
I didn't participate in that discussion, having just come in as it was concluding. But JFF basically told him to go ahead and delete it if he felt so strongly, but that SO mods weren't going to do it. It would need to be a CM. That part I definitely agree with.
I'm afraid that needs more convincing arguments then endorsements from just the few people that know me. I do appreciate the trust I obviously already gained from you folks.
I always imagined there were lots of bugs on rene. Aphids, perhaps.
But, as you can see on the election page, the nomination period begins July 6. So you'd want to bug people before that, so they can make a decision, but probably not too much before that, lest they forget and/or you become too annoying.
I don't recall the exact date, but the first thing we'll start doing is question solicitation on Meta. I don't know if you've been around for a mod election here yet, @Scratte, but the community has a chance to pose questions that they'd like to ask of prospective candidates. We propose, refine, and vote on these questions on Meta.
The top-scoring ones (the limit is very generous, it's not like only 1 or 2 get in) then get asked as part of the voluntary survey for mod candidates to fill out and link as part of their nomination post.
(The answers to the survey questions are themselves posted on Meta by candidates.)
@Scratte Well, kinda. An informed voter uses those answers to help make their choices of candidates.
After the election? I don't know. Not in any official way, but we haven't had any problem with liars yet.
The community would tend to hold them accountable on Meta. One of the rites of passage for a new moderator is getting a Meta question about some action they took as newly-minted moderator. I imagine the worst possible form of that call-out question would be one that cited their own nominating post as evidence against whatever action they took.
Some new mod handles flags in a different way than is the accepted community norm, and they get called out on Meta. They have to respond with a "mea culpa" answer.
Uhh.... don't know if I can find it. Baum mit Augen actually called me out at some point shortly after my election, complaining about how I handled a NAA or VLQ flag.
Apologizing for making a mistake is, IMHO, one of the surest signs of true strength. I just wish those who lead us (in the world, I mean, not Stack) would do so more often. I think their 'people' would actually warm to them for doing so.
I think the issue is that people often chose leaders that they think show strength. It requires some insight to see true strength instead of bully-strength.
@AdrianMole That's a very good example of the wrong approach. Is it really better to discuss Stack Exchange leaders on twitter or facebook?
Closed by 5 regular users, though. I'm voting to re-open (I'm the third at the time of writing). We aren't allowed to put [xxx-pls] requests for Meta posts in SOCVR, so...
Indeed! I thought I recognized the name; and I even had the username link in the 'visited' colour.
Just remembered: I can see what others in the CV review queue have voted, but only after I have done so. So, I sometimes get a 'sneak preview' of pending close voters.
@Dharman I also don't understand the mechanisms involved, and who gets selected to be the announcer. My only other 'interaction' with Lisa was that it was she who interviewed me (via Zoom) for Yaakov's UI-Revamp project. She struck me as an extremely 'gets-it' sort then.
@AdrianMole Yes... I was blaming Lisa for this, since her name is attached to it, and Catija corrected me, saying that this is something that's been in the works for a long time, and it wasn't all (or even primarily) Lisa's doing.
I still have a bit of an issue with that. I want to hold accountable the staff members who post things, and I feel like "it was a team effort" or "we were told to do it" is a huge cop-out that avoids blame/criticism, but I see that side as well.
Lisa did do the review revamp project, and that was a lot of her initiative. I don't know much about what went on there, but I've heard good things. Glad you confirm them, too.
Regarding the Meta announcement... that getting closed is completely inappropriate. No matter how much we don't want it, closing it or deleting it doesn't do any good, and just reduces the changes that employees will bother to ask for feedback in the future (not that we have a great track record on that, but promises are still being made).
When you see something like that closed, it's OK to raise a flag on Meta. Or ping me. Or, I guess, just wait for my meeting to end so I can see it and handle it. :-)
I assume that it having been closed is why it appeared as no longer featured, even though it still had the tag. It's back in the sidebar now, as it should be.
The lock was unrelated. Sam applied that before it was ever closed. Trilarion complained about the apparent contradiction between featured and locked recently, but as I said there, we don't believe there's a contradiction.
Now that we have this comments-only lock, you can expect to see it getting applied more and more to high-visibility posts, as a way to force people to post answers, instead of comments, which are just unwieldy, easily ignored, etc.
It's not a way to eliminate or suppress discussion. I can guarantee you that none of the moderators want that. We just want to have the discussion captured in answers.
And I have a problem with deleting comments where productive discussion has already happened (Sam has less of a problem with this than I do...), so I prefer applying the lock early, to prevent that useful discussion from ever taking place and then having to wring hands over deleting it when it gets unwieldy.
@Dharman Haven't heard anything. Not following it closely, though.
@Scratte Yaakov announced a while ago (4/5 months?) that they were looking at a major revamp of the review queue UI. They asked for volunteers to be interviewed (by Lisa) on their thoughts/ideas/complaints. I think quite a few of the SOCVR regulars took part. And Catija said (in SOCVR, ~1 month back) that there would be a follow-up survey.
I'm probably not supposed to tell you, but SE Inc. sent me a $20 online Visa Voucher for my troubles. When Lisa told me I'd be getting it, I asked if I could take +200 reputation, instead. She just smiled wryly.