It's a tad sad that there are a few candidates whom I've never heard of who barely participate in moderation at all yet have rep way higher than me and are going to end up shoving me and other lower-rep-but-more-active-with-moderation candidates out simply because of that.
@AstroCB Happens every election. People crawl out of the woodwork for a chance at being mod and then when they don't get elected disappear off the planet again
Nature of the election, I suppose.
Although I do think that the bottlenecking process needs some work; going purely by reputation isn't a good idea.
> You burn through the review queue every day and are the #1 active user on Meta with 1234567 helpful flags, but I have 10 more rep than you, so you're kicked out.
And it obviously wouldn't be at that magnitude with such a small margin, but the fact is that something like that could easily happen, and reputation is not a good way of determining moderation ability.
It's entirely unrealistic, though. Why would the most active user on meta have only 3k rep on Stack Overflow? Keep in mind that means said user has no access to important mod tools.
(highly rep-based elections are indeed a problem though)
Apparently, we're not supposed to be able to upvote comments in moderator elections any more.
Only, it turns out that you can, if you just know how:
Basically, it's yet another back-end validation issue: while the upvote button is missing from the page HTML, the SE back-end is still happy...
(although doing so severely irks me. Either keep the vote buttons or disable voting completely; the current situation of you-can-vote-if-you're-clever-enough is just a mess)
Seeing as all of the slots are replacements, and the workload is so heavy (at least that's how the moderators make it sound), adding more slots wouldn't exactly be a crazy idea.
@AstroCB On one hand, I like to defer to the judgement of the current moderators regarding whether more are necessary. On the other, existing mods may simply be stockholmed into believing the current balance is optimal. :P
@Hardipatel Right now it's just nominations; a chance for candidates to introduce themselves, people to ask questions, and a way to get a good overview of who wants to run.
@RahulNikate Right now it's just nominations; a chance for candidates to introduce themselves, people to ask questions, and a way to get a good overview of who wants to run. Votes are later.
@RahulNikate Right now it's just nominations; a chance for candidates to introduce themselves, people to ask questions, and a way to get a good overview of who wants to run. Votes are later.
We recently began the sixth moderator election on Stack Overflow. There is a huge number of highly qualified candidates, and there are 23 overall at the time of this writing.
That's great, but there's this to consider:
After 7 days, the top 30 nominees, ordered by reputation, advance to the ...
@AstroCB I suggest you could update your profile description box to include some useful information, instead of just nothing. Also, don't give up running for future elections if you don't pass the first time. Many don't succeed the first time due to the number of candidates. If you maintain your track record and participation, I will see you as a moderator someday.
@Duraiamuthan.H You can check the candidate score, also you can check the person's profile and navigate through his questions/answers, comments.. or any other information that you might find related.
@thecoshman Haha, well, then just watch and wait. If the thought crossed their mind, they'll probably nominate themselves sooner or later. There's a ton of good candidates right now, too.
@Siva There are three tabs (next to the line 25 candidates); the default is nomination; but there are tabs for the primaries and election phases as well.
Each tab then explains how that phase works, in the sidebar.
Nomination is just the candidates introducing themselves; the commenting then gives each nominee feedback, and it's a place for the community to ask questions.
Because we'll have more than 10 candidates we'll have a primaries phase, and you can vote on each and every candidate as if they were answers to a question.
So up or down, and you can see how many votes each candidate has.
The top 10 voted candidates then go to the actual election, at which point each community member gets to pick their top choice, second choice and 3rd choice.
@RahulNikate Right now it's just nominations; a chance for candidates to introduce themselves, people to ask questions, and a way to get a good overview of who wants to run. Votes are later.
The election board describes the criteria for nominating yourself in the nomination phase. You need to have all of the four badges "Civic Duty", "Strunk & White", "Deputy" and "Convention", as well as 3,000 reputation (this barrier lifts as more people nominate themselves.
Scroll down to the bottom of the page for election and there will be a link about nominating yourself.
> My main concern is that you may not be participating enough. Here's your Meta activity and, as I'm sure you may have noticed, your candidate score also reflects this (one of the lowest). How would you defend against an argument that you will not be participating enough to handle the responsibilities of that of a Stack Overflow moderator? – Unihedrojust now
I don't think that meta participation should be an indication on matching moderation rule. Before I vote, I visit each candidate profile, see their comments, answers, questions, votes, reviews, profile information.. any information that I find relevant.
@Unihedro at the current rate of gaining nominees, we'll have 291 nominees by the time we move to the primaries. I know, the rate is not likely to be sustained, but at 3.1k reputation, that user will probably be eliminated automatically as only the top 30 candidates by reputation go through.
The election board describes the criteria for nominating yourself in the nomination phase. You need to have all of the four badges "Civic Duty", "Strunk & White", "Deputy" and "Convention", as well as 3,000 reputation (this barrier lifts as more people nominate themselves.
user4419336
I would like to choose some one else I would not be good as a moderator yet.
@maveň Not if you ask me.. meta reputation shouldn't reflect someone's matching to this rule, specially when he's very active in stackoverflow and knows the rules.
@RahulNikate Right now it's just nominations; a chance for candidates to introduce themselves, people to ask questions, and a way to get a good overview of who wants to run. Votes are later.
@Phorce That is correct, given you have the reputation to. :)
Don't worry, you do.
Take some time visiting the nomination posts and ask your favorite candidates of policies you are concerned of. It helps them build a proper profile in their posts.
@MichaelMyers I'm wondering - there are obviously more than 3 people qualified to moderate the site, the bar is super high now and is getting higher. Wouldn't it make sense to tier things further in some way?
I know there is probably a duplicate floating around the web somewhere, but all my searches couldn't turn up how exactly candidate score is calculated. Is it based on badges? Reputation? Both?
Reputation shouldn't appear under "Meta Participation" since the reputation value it shows was earned on Stack Overflow not Meta.
I understand that a user's Meta reputation is just the same as the main site's reputation. But why even include a Reputation stat under Meta Participation? I could ...
Why is 3000 reputation the requirement in the moderator election nomination phase, even though 20000 is the threshold for trusted user?
I checked this on the 2015 Moderator Election page, the right sidebar has:
In the nomination phase, any community member in good standing with more than 3,0...
I'm trying to open below link but it's not loading at all.
http://elections.stackexchange.com/#stackoverflow
I've been waited quite long time but no response at all.
I just checked out http://stackoverflow.com/election/6 and saw a lot of nonsense comments ("ah! Thanks for pointing out the typo.", "Best Luck buddy!", etc.). Why can't I flag them - being as unconstructive as any other unconstructive comment on other sites (I haven't found another where I can't ...
I'm trying to open below link but it's not loading at all.
http://elections.stackexchange.com/#stackoverflow
I've been waited quite long time but no response at all.
On Windows at least, the system clipboard is incredibly flexible - you can put just about anything you want in there. Every multi-clipboard app I've ever tried pretends this isn't a thing and starts to fall apart when it can't convert the current contents into text or a reasonably-sized image.
The worst ones obsessively render everything, meaning even very large texts can cause problems (normally these wouldn't be rendered until they were pasted, which could be significantly optimized if you're pasting into the same app) but enough about my problems with stupid WinAPI devs.
Usually I'd have some sort of synopsis of what the issue was but to be honest…I just turned it off and back on again. status-completed, for now.
I'll see if I can figure out what the cause was.
There's an additional issue where the large number of candidates in this election can cause an API th...