Subject: My Proposal
Author:
Posted on: 2012-06-04 17:36:00 UTC

I think that what we need in a moderator is power without authority. We do sometimes need to ban people - spambots, or just people who really don't listen - and sometimes locking threads could be extremely useful. But that shouldn't be any one person's decision to make. So. This:

The Powers

I suggest that moderators be given the ability to:
-Ban users and/or IP addresses, depending on the Board setup (see, I'm not ranting about how we should never move - that's for later ;)). This would be useful for trolls and spambots - more so the latter, since we point and laugh at trolls. :P
-Lock posts, so that no further replies can be given to them or to anything descending from them. This would extend to locking entire threads simply by locking the top post. This would be useful for uber-conversations stretching the Board (when it's only two people, this is), and for flamewars, should they ever crop up. It does need to be specific, though - there's no need to lock a whole thread because of something happening in a sub-thread, and I adore the multi-threading nature of the Board.
-Collapse a conversation into its starter post. This, actually, could be automated - if a conversation reaches more than (say) ten indents, it automatically collapses so you have to go into the tenth to see all the others. Livejournal does this, I believe.
-Poof posts, as Dann suggested, so that they are hidden but can be clicked to read. This would be ideal for the situations where someone posts something without a warning - which is a legitimate problem, and one we can only currently deal with by replying with 'THIS CONTAINS whatever'.
-Delete posts and threads. This would be, again, necessary for spambots, but not often used otherwise.

I do not think moderators should be able to edit other Boarders' posts, nor should there be any 'formal warning' system - particularly not leading to a ban. I would much prefer fire-and-forget moderators, who operate based on specific actions, not ongoing trends or feelings about the individual. That's what the community response is for - as mentioned (far) above, if someone is (eg) reviewing stories with flames, they will be asked to stop by the Board - and if they keep going, that's trollish behaviour.

The Authority

I suggest that moderators have specifically defined authority. They would be allowed to deal unilaterally with:
-Spambots
-Obvious trolls (I mean really obvious)
-Extended conversations (lock or, preferably, collapse, as above - with a specific limit on the term 'extended')
-(Possibly) poofing and stating what the warning should be - but only for things that should have been warned but weren't.

Beyond that, I suggest that Boarders should be given a very simple method of asking a mod to intervene - given the small size of the PPC, this would be best given as a button at the top of the Board, not on every post. We would send a note to the mods - it would go to every active mod - where we actually say why we object to something, rather than just saying 'This is bad'. Then, the moderator would do nothing.

Because moderators would not be allowed to act without a community response saying they should. The message system is because people may be uncomfortable saying anything on-Board, particularly if it's an older member acting up (oh yes it /does/ happen). So make sure it's anonymous (in case it's a mod acting up), and make specific guidelines. For instance, six people need to request intervention, or at least as many people as have responded positively to the post in question, whichever is greater. Then, and only then, the moderator would be permitted to intervene.

You may have noticed that what I've said is pretty much 'We should have more functionality for the Nameless Admin'. That's because we don't need moderators. Admins with power but no authority beyond cosmetic changes or community request, yes. Moderators who get to pick who is allowed to post what, no.

hS

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