@DoubleAA As far as on the answers here? I'm not sure...I'm inclined to think that most people vote on whether or not they think the question was useful to be answered, but I have nothing to say it's not the responses being voted on instead. — Tim StoneJul 20 '12 at 18:11
Yeah, I haven't even started yet since I knew there were a few candidates who would likely be showing up shortly after the Town Hall ended to answer. I'll be taking care of the digest in a few hours (and will pull any new answers in as necessary). :)
@AnnaLear Well, not technically always. Someone had to be irresponsible, and @MichaelMrozek swung the feature request hammer of doom to put a stop to it.
Do you see your role as primarily dealing with issues other users bring to you, or will you be "out on the streets" so to speak, actively policing posts? Describe what makes the difference for you between letting the users guide the site, and you taking unilateral action on items not yet flagged.
Unlike some of the other sites on the network, Stack Overflow has no shortage of Meta commentary on issues of moderation from the community. Given that some of this can be strongly opinionated, how will what gets brought up on Meta influence your decision making process?
How much time to you expect to dedicate towards being a moderator? Do you feel like this will impact your participation on the site as a normal user, and do you worry about finding the right balance between the two to keep things enjoyable?
@JeremyHolovacs There's typically a correlation with that, I suppose. I'd classify it as someone who provides meaningful content and is generally familiar with how the site works to the point where the disagreement isn't just because one of the parties is "new."
Two highly respected members of the community get in a comment war on a question. They both flag each other's comments and are cussing and it is clear that this is beyond a heated argument. What do you do, what don't you do?
@Shog9 Yeah, I answered questions for the Gaming contest because it was about a game I was really interested in, not because I could get a prize. However, that's clearly not the case for everyone who participates...
Actually, my first bit of swag was a t-shirt and stickers that Jeff gave some of us for being in a particular chat room when SO hit 1 million questions, so I suppose that works out.