@GraceNote I think good judgement and an even temperament are the most important aspects for a moderator, and I have those. You have to look beyond the surface frequently. For instance, very few people noticed the account that Shog9 linked too only posts self-promotional answers. Editing the answer is not a solution there, the account is a problem and needs to be dealt with.
@MadaraUchiha Hopefully it's helped me. I know it's clarified who I am/am not voting for among the other candidates. I hope it gives voters a better idea of how we will operate as mods.
@Shog9 Make a comment to the user about the policy on self promotion, then delete it. If he wants to clean it up and flag for undelete he can do that. It's obvious from his profile that's a product he is associated with that he doesn't disclose in the "answer". Looking deeper that is a questionable account and he may need a mod message. All his answers are self-promotion.
@RaghavSood I think the folks in those tags can probably tell us better than we can deduce on our own. There are millions of users and a few dozen mods - let's crowdsource some of that initial filtering to see what needs attention.
@BradLarson Private chat most likely, then a mod message. Let them know their contributions are appreciated but the less constructive stuff is not. Nobody is so important to the site that destructive behavior needs to be tolerated.
@Gordon Not very, as long as they know how to handle the tools and can learn. None of this stuff is rocket science, but it takes good judgement. It's not hard to use a hack saw, but it's easy to screw something up seriously if you use it in the wrong spot.
@MadaraUchiha I think experience in life is helpful in making thoughtful decisions, generally speaking. I don't think that precludes any of the younger candidates from being qualified, but there's a reason we don't let kids drive or vote - decision making is biologically impaired until a certain age.
@MadaraUchiha It depends on what the flag was for. If it's a dupe it's a dupe it's a dupe whether you know the subject matter or not. Same for off-topic. NARQ may be hard to judge though. It's impossible to make an honest general assessment on something so broad.
@Shog9 Get someone on the SE dev team to attribute the posts to casperOne so nobody is surprised :) Honestly, I have no problem defending my actions to a user. If I WAS wrong, I also have no problem admitting that. We aren't doing open heart surgery hear, this is programming questions on the innertubes. Nothing is life-and-death and excited users may need to be reminded of that once in a while.
@NullUserException None at all. If I think it needs to be closed then I feel as strongly about it as a mod as I do as a regular user. I don't vote on things unless I am sure either as a mod or a voter.
@Neal The effort required for moderating other sites pales in comparison to the demands on SO. I have some tangential understanding from current SO mods about what is needed. There are very few flags on my site and we have several other very active mods, so I could focus more on SO without hurting DBA.
@GraceNote Probably @ChrisF I have talked to him at length in the moderator chat room and he is very even-headed and no-nonsense about his job as a mod.
@BradLarson If the question has any potential redemption value, I'd leave it for a while at least. If it's obviously a throw-away question there's no need to keep it. But you do need to give the OP a chance to clean it up.
@Neal I'm already a mod on another site and I find it very satisfying work. It is work, though, so you have to really want to do it. And if you enjoy it, SO is the big leagues.
@swasheck Encouragement. We have some of this on the DBA site, where a lot of big names in the SQL world participate. There are also a lot of strong personalities (they are DBAs after all) and they require some management. Mainly if you let the frustrated user know either verbally or through action that their contributions are appreciated, they stay happy. Most folks like that are motivated by helping and may need some positive feedback from time to time.
@MadaraUchiha I don't think any are particularly indicative of future performance as a mod. Close/deletes are probably closest to what you actually do as a moderator. Raising flags for most scenarios becomes redundant when you can cast votes.
@swasheck To clarify a little bit, I think it is good to encourage being nicer to new users. However on SO a lack of new users is not an issue - it's cleaning up the trash an keeping signal to noise ratio high.
@AnnaLear Nope, this won't change how I operate. I may have to edit some of my comments and such from 3 years back but otherwise I'll operate the same.
@Lamak I haven't banned you on DBA yet! But seriously, we don't need anything revolutionary on SO, we need consistent forward movement and maintenance. I know I can provide that.
@NullUserException I think my ability to contribute as a mod far outweighs my ability to contribute knowledge in my main area of SQL. There are a lot smarter people than me answering questions, but they don't all have the stomach or patience for moderation. I know I already have those and I enjoy it.
@Shog9 I think being able to handle issues faster (single vote power) is key on SO since the flood of questions - and related problems - rarely slows down. Closing/deleting/migrating more efficiently and without waiting for a consensus.
@GraceNote Again this depends on the site. On DBA we do community building and try to increase awareness/involvement. On SO you have big city problems, so I think the biggest responsibility on SO would be taking care of broken windows.
@AnnaLear Exceptions would be rude comments, spam users that need to be nuked, questions on the wrong site (without a votable migration path), comments posted as answers...