About me:
I have been a member for about a year and 3 months. That's not a lot but I have a good feel for the website and what belongs here and what doesn't. More on that later.
I am a numbers person. So let's start with the numbers; here's what are my numbers compared to the requirements:
- Civic Duty: Voted 300 or more times – I've voted ~1,600 times
- Strunk & White: Edited 80 posts – I've got Copy Editor and ~1300 edits.
- Deputy: 500 flag weight – I have perfect flag weight (750.0000)
- Convention: 10 posts with score of 2 on meta – I have 78 of them.
Why I might not be a good moderator:
I am an inclusionist (specially when it comes to questions), and I've made no secret of that. I am probably less inclined to close questions and delete answers than most people here.
That stems from my belief that everyone should have a chance, and that we should be more friendly to new users and novice programmers. Was everyone here born an expert programmer? Did everyone make high quality posts on SO from their very first post? Probably not.
There are people who probably dislike me because I am vocal on some issues (like this). I am also vocal on answers I believe to be wrong, so if you've received a -1 from me, don't take it personally and note that at least I had the courtesy of explaining why I did it.
I realize this is going to cost me some votes, but hey, at least you'll know what you are getting.
Why I would be a good moderator:
I am active in many tags. I have over 100 score in sql, javascript, c#, java, python, php and others.
I try to keep content clean. I'll organize posts, fix broken English, fix dead links, etc. This made me one of the Top 100 Editors All-time.
I have a good feel for what belongs here and what doesn't. I have 750 flag weight (~600 helpful flags), with one declined flag. It was on this post.
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meta questions: 86 / +813
meta answers: 67 / +725
helpful flags: 618
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posted Nov 14 '11 at 16:38
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About Me:
I'm a very long standing member of the Stack Overflow community. I have been on the site since private beta an have participated in meta since its inception. (I'm on the first page reputation-wise on meta.)
This is the 3rd time I've run for moderator now. I've narrowly missed being elected in each. I was essentially the first runner up from the last one.
Policy:
As a moderator I'm mostly an inclusionist. I believe that people who contribute to the site should be given time to bring contributions up to our community standard. However, if any content on the site is considered below our standard, and the contributor has not made an effort to clean it up, it should be removed from the site to prevent clutter;
I am very aware of and spend time viewing lots of the other Stack Exchange sites, so I am very familiar with what belongs here and what doesn't.
I also understand that clutter will be the eventual downfall of the site, and keeping Stack Overflow's signal to noise ratio will be my first concern.
Credentials:
- Long history with the site
- All of the required badges (including lots of ones that aren't required)
- Long-standing history of participation
- Fun and hard-working attitude
TLDR:
I love Stack Overflow. And I know many many other people do as well. Vote for me and I will keep this site up and running smoothly for every one to enjoy and benefit from.
Extra Thoughts
p.s. I also like to have fun and joke around. I just wanted to keep this post as short as possible so I left out all of my awesome jokes...
For a little more info, see a blog post I wrote about being a moderator for the last election. http://codingbycoincidence.blogspot.com/2011/01/what-moderator-is.html
Oh, and I developed a Java library using the StackExchange api. I also build an app for comparing reputation across sites with that API.
...Oh yeah, I've also been fairly active in reviewing edits. I've approved or rejected over 1500 suggested edits.
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meta questions: 77 / +1,581
meta answers: 384 / +2,652
helpful flags: 54
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posted Nov 14 '11 at 14:05
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Self-nomination
Hello Stack Overflow! I'd like to nominate myself as a candidate in this upcoming moderator election.
The key part of being a moderator here is having good judgement, and I think that's something I do have. I've got a flag weight of almost over 600 (which would be more if I flagged questions instead of closing them manually since I got that privilege) and only around 4 flags that have been deemed invalid (hopefully) showing that I know what belongs where here, when to close or to migrate, or what's rude, harassment, or spam. I've come across many things before that don't belong on Stack Overflow and should be deleted, and I could definitely help manage the abundance of poorly written or unconstructive items instead of having to delegate it to moderators.
Please don't let my age deter anybody. I can assure you that I'm just as mature as anyone else. Sometimes more so =)
So... vote minitech! I'll delete stuff and edit and close it and whatnot.
Self-promotion!!!
If you think reputation and time spent here and things like that aren't important, don't read this section. Otherwise, please continue. =)
I've been on Stack Overflow for less than a year (a little over 7 months) but I've already hit the 10k mark for reputation. I'm a very active participator here, especially in vb.net, c#, javascript, jquery and php, and out of the some 210 days I've been registered I've visited 193 days, editing, reviewing, asking, and answering all the while. Now that I have a laptop (yay!) I believe I have what it takes to be a moderator, since I can actively review everything, all the time.
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meta questions: 42 / +237
meta answers: 37 / +166
helpful flags: 3303
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posted Nov 12 '11 at 21:57
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slugster
Vote for me, I'm willing to sweep the floors and keep on top of the flags queue. I'm also prepared to deal with the requests to "plz merge my old Jon Skeet account with my new account, honestly it is my account" and to clean up duplicate answers that have been sprayed around on vaguely related questions by new users.
I know the life of a moderator is not just about glamour and hanging out with the groupies, it requires continuous work to keep the site tidy. Check out my activity - you will see that I am continuously doing a lot of the housekeeping type work that could be expected from a moderator, it has earned me the four badges mandatory for selection.
Also note my 700+ flag weight. What this bit of information really means is that not only do I do a reasonable volume of work, that work is of a good quality. What doesn't show directly in that flag weight is the number of questions that I have tidied up or voted on as a result of reviewing those flags. I'm active with suggestions and questions on Meta, and my answers to the questions Etiquette for flagging a high rep user's old answer as Not an Answer and Should my answer be more succinct or more verbose? give an insight into how I handle and think about things.
Who am I? In real life I am a senior level professional developer (i.e. I have been in the game a long time, lectured at TechEd, etc.), so I have a nose for sniffing out crap in questions and answers. I have previously moderated on other forums, dealing with the h4x0rs and crackers in the open discussion area on masmforum.com certainly helps build a thick skin and no nonsense approach. I am located in the bottom end of the world (new Zealand, not far from Australia), in a timezone that is nicely offset from the UK and USA, which means I can catch questions and clean-up while others are sleeping.
If you want to know how I roll, check out my answers in the Town Hall Chat Digest #1. Due to work commitments I wasn't able to attend the Town Hall Chat Digest #2 until near the end, so I just cherry picked some questions from that one to answer.
My agenda
Let's face it, I don't want to become a moderator simply to get god like powers and that little diamond beside my moniker. I also have a couple of things I would like to achieve:
- to really get the canonical answer concept going. There are some answers that really are so good that they should be recognised as THE answer, and subsequent duplicate questions should be pointed back to that original answer. Imagine if you get recognised as the author of one of these canonical answers! Once this gets traction I can see it improving the answer quality markedly as people strive to attain this.
- There are a lot of old "What is the best ..." type questions - many of these have limited relevance one or two years on, but some of them still have some value. These need to be rationalised, the goods ones kept and the bad ones 'cancelled'.
These are goals that will take some time (and co-operation from fellow moderators and SO'ers) to achieve.
Due to the amount of time I already spend on the site over the day, being a moderator on Stack Overflow is not going to require any extra effort on my part, it will simply enable me to do a more comprehensive job than what I'm currently able to do. In addition to the current flow of work there is still a lot to be done cleaning up historical questions, and having moderator privileges will assist with that.
Thanks for listening :)
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meta questions: 46 / +249
meta answers: 186 / +765
helpful flags: 812
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posted Nov 11 '11 at 11:18
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Stu for Community Moderator!
Why? Because I...
...have been an SO user since beta, user id 2961
...actively participated on meta during SO's formative days. (I slowed down once my MSO rep approached my SO rep. That was about the time when J&J were likening heavy MSO users to teacher's pets on the podcast. They had a point.)
...have a flag weight approaching 650. After a systematic effort to flag older answers with problems in the tags I am active in, I now flag answers as I come across them. (Spam. Must. Die.)
...suggested the creation of the Copy Editor badge, which I have also earned
...have a fetish for cleaning up the newbie & ESL users' questions and answers. I believe this is a much more preferable action than flagging/deleting/voting to close questions and answers that are salvageable.
Most importantly...
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meta questions: 26 / +370
meta answers: 85 / +710
helpful flags: 124
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I will throw my name into the ring for moderator position.
I am very active in the php, mysql and security tag areas. In addition to generally looking at site in general (my favorite tag list is quite diversified)
I have been a member for about 1.5 years, but out of that time I have visited the site nearly every single day (from my profile: 544 days, 541 consecutive).
I have a flag weight of 589%. The only reason it's not higher is that I only tend to flag when it's really an egregious offence or in an area I can't control. Otherwise I will cast my own vote (close, delete, etc).
I am #308 ranked by reputation all time on the site with 30,305 rep at this point. The vast majority of that rep is from answers as I have only asked 12 questions. Note: I'm not saying that I think it's worth anything either way (meaning it's good or bad), just stating it as a fact of what I've done...
I have been involved in Open Source communities for the past 5 years to varying degrees of participation (everything from simple patches to lead developer roles).
I participate regularly in discussions on the php-internals mailing list, so I'm abreast of the latest changes and features in the PHP world.
I am very active on the StackOverflow chat site focusing on the PHP room. But I have been in other rooms as well with varying amount of frequency.
I have been a lurker of Meta SO with some contributions there as well.
I meet all requisite requirements for the position (including reputation, badges and personality requirements).
In addition, I have a ninja badge from Stack Overflow (those of you who have one know what that means).
Oh, and I love kittens, but unicorns freak me out. Oh, and I'm not insane! My mother had me tested!...
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meta questions: 10 / +82
meta answers: 11 / +123
helpful flags: 41
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posted Nov 8 '11 at 17:10
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I would like to nominate myself for the position of community moderator.
- I am active mainly in drupal (and related tags) questions, but my activity is not limited to answering; I review low quality posts, and flag posts that need moderations attention (my flag weight was 622.0683, when I nominated myself).
- I am active on Meta Stack Overflow, where my flag weight is 584.7670, and my reputation passed from 257 to the current value in 7 months.
- I am a 20k user on English Language & Usage, and a 10k user on Meta Stack Overflow and Drupal Answers.
- My participation in different SE sites allows me to better understand how Stack Exchange sites work.
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meta questions: 288 / +1,476
meta answers: 915 / +3,165
helpful flags: 453
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posted Nov 8 '11 at 13:48
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I am trying to get to the moderator position, because I consider myself a tolerant and patient person with a lot of free time, always trying to do my best when helping people.
I know that everyone make mistakes, that everyone is better in specific areas. I can also accept critique and I'm able to accept my fault.
If I would have to deal with people defending with an incorrect opinion, I would tolerantly explain why they're wrong by providing objective arguments and/or evidence to support my case.
I'm experienced in the Stack Overflow system a lot, even though I've only been registered for a short time.
I report bugs most times, for example this one which would be an easy way to get free flag weight.
Yes, I know, I have a few denied flags, (1624 helpful, 67 disputed (mainly flagged invalid flags), 28 unhelpful) which means that I have only 98.19 % of accepted/disputed flags but I still think it's pretty fair. My current flag weight is 737, (lost 2 flags (20 points) in a very short time)
Yes, I know, my English isn't perfect, I am trying to improve it as fast as possible, but I also don't think that's the main aspect of moderation requirement, though I know it's a requirement to be understandable and communicative, which I am.
I wish I could get into the moderator position and be even more active than I'm currently and make Stack Overflow even better place for all programmers around the whole world.
I'm quite active on meta and trying to do my best when answering both good and bad questions.
I will be always there for Stack Exchange network, and I also want to show to everyone that even a young person can do big things.
I'm young active PHP programmer and Facebook enthusiast which aims to the skies.
Please, do not consider your "vote" based on my age, I know that I am young, but I think I can handle this position.
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meta questions: 79 / +276
meta answers: 112 / +407
helpful flags: 1649
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posted Nov 8 '11 at 13:31
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Consider me also, I hope I could help the community 0.001% better.
Although I am not good in English, and not active recently, and use to refrain from arguments or such.
I used to be active meta before, and currently being pro tem mod at japanese.SE site, but there is almost nothing to moderate though.
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meta questions: 97 / +648
meta answers: 374 / +1,573
helpful flags: 537
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I got my start on SO a little over two years ago, looking for help on XSLT stuff. Since then, I became more involved - answering SQL, PHP and Java related questions. Once my rep got high enough, I was correcting tags, spelling, and grammar...
These days, I'm finding myself participating in SO differently. I'm not answering as many questions, instead I'm commenting constructively, editing for proper tags & readability. Being a moderator would be a logical progression.
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meta questions: 15 / +45
meta answers: 17 / +47
helpful flags: 130
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I am interested in becoming a moderator on Stack Overflow. I haven't been on the site for quite one year, but I believe that what I lack in longevity is made up for in effort. I have just reached 5K reputation, but this doesn't tell the whole story of my participation.
I am an enthusiastic editor, approver of suggested edits, voter, and reviewer. In addition to Strunk and White, I have the Copy Editor badge. I have attained the Marshal badge (and hold the Deputy badge on SO and 4 other SE sites). I have the Electorate badge, and am very active yet careful in voting on the 6-7 SE sites that I visit regularly. I am nearing the 5K mark on Meta, and try to keep abreast of the new features of SO.
All of this may prove that I spend a lot of time here, but in addition to this, I care about the community. I care about keeping questions organized, and making sure that they can be answered both for the asker, and for future visitors. I care about the quality and presentation of questions, answers, and comments, and want to help the community maintain it's position as a leader in this area.
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meta questions: 37 / +339
meta answers: 130 / +707
helpful flags: 2291
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I would like to be your next moderator.
Why me?
I've been on Stack Overflow since shortly after opened to the public, and have been extremely active since then. Most of my activity has been centered around making the site better for the user, as evidenced by my high edit rate (#51 of the top 100 Editors), as well as my high Meta reputation (ranked 27th on Meta).
I participated in the last Moderator chat, and my stances are well known, both through that chat and my answers on Meta.
I believe in fairness. If I see a post that needs to be closed, I'll vote to close it and flag it. If it's salvageable, I'll try to salvage it. I assume good faith until proven otherwise.
If you want to know more about me or the stances I take, just check out my answers on Meta, they'll tell you everything about how I moderate.
Me, by the numbers:
Questions edited: 2413
Reputation Rank, Meta: 27th out of 28,220 active users
Posts with a score of 2 or better on Meta: 262
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meta questions: 67 / +759
meta answers: 533 / +3,925
helpful flags: 726
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I was going to nominate myself in the last Stack Overflow election, but the rising reputation requirements quickly made that impossible. I see that as a good thing - I'm now far more prepared to be a Stack Overflow moderator than I was before.
As some of you may know, I'm a moderator over on Stack Overflow's softer side, Programmers. You can check out my activity stream there and get a pretty good picture of my moderation style and commitment to meeting the guidelines set out in the Theory of Moderation.
I monitor flag queues daily, check 10k tools, suggested edits queue, and of course the front page itself. My reputation gain has significantly slowed down since I became a moderator and I even lost a bunch of rep once we started clearing out older, now-significantly-offtopic questions. I'm always putting my duties as a moderator first and personal gains second.
I've worked with Stack Overflow moderators over the last 10 months or so and I know how much work is involved and how complex and/or tedious certain issues can be. I think I'm up to the challenge. I have all the requisite badges (including the two that were dropped from the criteria) and I'm quite active on Meta. I also have the time.
My SO rep leaves a bit to be desired, but I check in daily now both looking for questions to answer, questions that are possibly better asked on Programmers, and questions and answers that otherwise need attention. I gained roughly 2300 reputation since the last SO election, which perhaps isn't much but it's certainly a move in the right direction. :)
I know there's been some tension between Programmers and Stack Overflow, and I think it'd be kinda neat to have a moderator who's very well familiar with both sites and the rest of the network. I think I could be that moderator.
P.S. In the interest of full disclosure, I'm also a pro tem moderator on Literature. It requires very little moderation however, unlike the bigger sites in the network.
Q&A:
Are you sure you want to handle the moderation load (and abuse by non-content users) of two sites at once?
Yes, I'm sure. I have the time to devote to it and the abuse doesn't bother me much. Outright abuse is actually fairly rare and the rest of the time it's just people wondering why a decision has been made. I can always explain my thought process for any action as a moderator and I'm happy to revert actions that turned out to be in error, so I think things work out well in the end.
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meta questions: 46 / +616
meta answers: 597 / +4,683
helpful flags: 285
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I was excited when Stack Overflow was first announced. I wasn't a regular reader of Coding Horror or Joel on Software. In fact, I slightly distrusted both of them for using Microsoft products1. But they both seemed competent enough to save us from the evils of Experts-Exchange, and I joined for the private beta (with user id 1114).
When the site launched I recommended it to everybody. I was happy with the site overall; I participated occasionally and made a few posts on UserVoice, but many of Joel and Jeff's decisions irritated me. They seemed arbitrary and bizarre, and reinforced my existing negative impressions of them.
A few years later (~six months ago) I finally ended up listening to an episode of the podcast. I can't remember why, it was probably recommended by some meta thread. As I listened, I was surprised. They actually sounded quite reasonable! I listened to more of the archive, and more, and then started reading old meta threads.
All of a sudden old decisions that had seemed random began to make sense. As I started to appreciate the philosophy of Stack Overflow I became more excited about the site and my participation increased dramatically. I had been transformed from an occasional user into a Fanatic! ;-)
Since then, I've been very active on Stack Overflow and Meta, picking up Electorate on both sites. Most of the answers I've contributed have been in python and javascript, for which I have silver badges, though I also browse many tags I'm inexperienced with to learn about them. I've spent a while reviewing and searching through old posts and have the Marshal badge for reaching 749 flag weight. It would be very satisfying to be able to act directly instead of just creating work for others.
I do my best to consider the site's philosophy and the community's consensus while editing. I don't have any unique plans for how I'd behave as a moderator; there's a lot of work to be done and I think I have the time, enthusiasm and competence to help. As a moderator, when I'm not sure how the community feels about an issue I'll look for and read previous meta discussions before taking action.
As a last point, I have Publicist on Stack Overflow and Announcer on several smaller Stack Exchange sites, accounting for tens of thousands of visits. I don't have much expertise to contribute on other Stack Exchange sites, so I try to contribute in ways like this.
You May Also Enjoy
1 In hindsight, this was pretty dumb.
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meta questions: 73 / +907
meta answers: 146 / +1,265
helpful flags: 1436
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I've been thinking about this for some time now, and I'd also like to nominate myself for the Stack Overflow 2011 community moderator election.
If nothing else, I have a tremendous amount of respect for this community and what it has accomplished, as well as a passion for contributing. I may not be one of the original users, or one of the reputation stars, or stand out from the crowd in any particular way... But I'm here and I'm contributing and I want to do what I can to help where I can.
Stack Overflow has provided me with help on countless occasions. I haven't asked many questions because at least 3/4 of the time the question I have has already been asked and answered. There is a wealth of content here and it's growing every day. Given everything I've received from this website, I want to help keep it going. I want to help maintain the standards that make this community so great.
I'll let the content I've provided to this community speak for itself. I like to think some of it is great. I admit much of it is mediocre. I also admit some of it is poor. (Indeed, I'm sure I've left some comments from time to time which really aren't constructive at all. We all make mistakes, and I'm no exception to that.) All of it together represents who I am and how I contribute to this community.
My reputation graph seems to reflect the time I spend on this site in the fact that there are months where I'm here constantly and there are months where I barely contribute. My professional life sometimes keeps me away from this community, but I'm never so far as to not help out in some way. Even on days when I can't find the questions to answer or the time to answer them, I'm still here browsing the content. Learning from others, helping to moderate (voting to close or migrate, leaving hopefully helpful comments on questions for which I don't otherwise have an answer, and so on), sometimes just bumming around and looking for a way to contribute.
Between the wonderful content which has helped me on countless occasions, the content I've provided which has helped me grow as a developer, the members of the community with whom I've interacted, and even the wonderful job I landed through Stack Overflow Careers... I've gained so much from this community. Being a moderator is another way for me to give back.
Thank you for your consideration, and thank you for taking the time to participate in the Stack Overflow community moderator election.
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meta questions: 11 / +51
meta answers: 67 / +403
helpful flags: 185
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I believe I'd make a fair and useful moderator for the following reasons:
Time: I currently use Stack Overflow to fill what would otherwise be idle time. This typically replaces "reading the news" whilst eating breakfast/lunch, the 5-10 minutes whilst building/testing some new code. Stack Overflow filled a newsgroup sized hole in my habits when my local NNTP server got pulled because nobody else was using it any more! My usual time-zone is GMT/BST.
Active: I'm fairly active in the C++ and C++11 tags, although by no means the most active in either. As well as that I regularly look over the "late answers to old questions" list, looking for answers that need editing or look suspicious in some way (e.g. spam/sockpuppets). I have some experience in a number of other tags too, as well as basic sysadmin experience which I've used to raise flags to prevent inappropriate migrations to Server Fault in particular.
Badges: I have the requisite badges (and actually the gold equivalents of the silver ones too). I actually like that having got the gold flag weight badge I'm able to flag the problem posts that are less obvious - the ones that 9 times out of 10 get marked as helpful, but occasionally get disputed; which I avoided before getting the badges. I mostly like doing things because they're useful. Badges were a distraction from that, moderator access would increase the number of useful actions available.
Awareness: I feel I know my limitations. I'm fairly good at knowing when and where I should seek further advice. As an example one of the first things I did after getting access to the 10K tools was ask about how best to handle several borderline cases on chat and read a lot of meta posts about the 10K tools. I've also raised quite a few flags that ran along the lines of "there are several problems here, (list of problems) - I'm not sure how best to proceed" and then observed the action taken by moderators.
Fair and objective: In my view all of my actions to date on this site (and others on the network) have been objective and fair. I'm able to recognise the danger signs of losing that objectivity and step back to allow someone else to handle that and avoid escalating a situation into a conflict. In the past that's been through flagging (and a keen watch to see the result). As a moderator that would be walking away to let someone else handle it.
Summary: I feel like I've seen how things work around here, I have time to offer and I'd like access to the moderator tools to convert my time into direct actions rather than simply adding them to somebody else's list of tasks.
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meta questions: 23 / +263
meta answers: 82 / +558
helpful flags: 7419
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posted Nov 7 '11 at 23:36
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I would like to nominate myself for a position as a moderator on Stack Overflow (I meet the requirements, in case anyone's checking).
I have been an active member of Stack Overflow for the last three years, and have witnessed the spectacular growth of the site over that time. I've benefited both from answers to my questions as well as lessons learned from answering others. I'd like to help the site remain the best programming resource out there by keeping it clean as it continues to grow.
My area of expertise on Stack Overflow is on the Apple side of development, in particular their iOS devices. I am currently the top all-time user in the iphone, ios, and a few related tags. While I enjoy developing for Mac and iOS right now, I work with many platforms on a regular basis and believe that specific technologies are less important than the real-world problems you are trying to solve with them.
However, my questions and answers are not why I believe I am qualified to be a moderator. Lately, I've found myself spending far more time performing janitorial work, by flagging, casting close votes, and, when appropriate, voting to delete exceptionally bad content.
As of this writing, I've cast 6870 flags, with 2468 of those deemed helpful, 6 declined, and 8 disputed (the rest were cast before these stats were counted). I've flagged 1493 instances of spam, and was one of the first users to receive the Marshal badge. I believe I've shown that I can identify material which is inappropriate for the site, but rather than jam up the moderation queue with flags, I'd be glad to help process them and take some of the load off of the existing moderators.
For content that can be salvaged, I've spent a significant amount of time editing questions into shape. I have the Copy Editor badge and I am more than happy to find questions with rough English, but a good core problem, and turn them into something that attracts votes and quality answers.
I'm a cofounder of the company I work at, so they're not going to fire me for the time I spend on the site.
Finally, I believe that I've always been polite and professional when dealing with people here on Stack Overflow. A moderator needs to maintain a cool head, and I believe that I would be able to do so if elected.
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meta questions: 13 / +151
meta answers: 128 / +1,009
helpful flags: 3920
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posted Nov 7 '11 at 23:04
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I'd like to -ahem- humbly nominate myself for a moderator position on Stack Overflow. Although I've been a member for more than two years (since May 2009), I've only been active starting May 2010. That said, I've been extremely active, and I do somehow have two Yearling badges!
Anyway, first off, I'm 19 years old, and I live in Singapore. So, I hail from the other side of the world — for many of you, anyway. If you think about timezone issues with users, questions and answers around the site, that may be a good or bad thing (I'm in UTC+8). I also happen to be the top user in my country by reputation! I spend much more time on the site answering questions compared to other active Singaporean SE users like Yi Jiang, but we all contribute in our own ways to the same site(s) as a whole, which is nice :)
In terms of tags, you'll often find me answering questions about:
You may also, or otherwise, know me on Stack Overflow for:
I also carry out retags (lots and lots of retags on html5css3 questions...), formatting edits, link fixes and others such in the aforementioned tags, so it's not just answering questions. In fact, I'm recently finding myself commenting and editing more than answering — so much that I've been among the top 20 editors of all time for a while!
Not that less or more of either is better, of course. However, as a moderator I believe I can be more efficient than ever with post revisions and other janitorial duties, as I continue with my question-answering business. While I actively add fresh content to the site, I'd love to help out with cleaning and polishing our currently-existing posts. "Dust tends to settle", and all that jazz.
I visit meta once in a while, but most of my time spent there is with questions and on voting on other posts. I'm trying to answer more meta questions!
In terms of flags, my flag weight is about 670 right now. I'll often flag bad posts that I come across while doing cleanup work, as well as posts where drama is brewing. Admittedly, the mod queue has been quite a turn-off for me with that consistently large number on the top bar; that's one reason why I feel bad about raising flags at times. Consequently, as a regular user, I also feel bad about being unable to help the existing moderators in dealing with the mod queue directly.
In short: I'm tired of raising flags (and I can't hold a candle to Brad Larson in that aspect!), and want to start resolving them. I imagine it'll be a challenge, again given that consistently large number up at the top, but I'd like to help out however I can.
Another thing I felt I had to bring up: you probably know me for leaving comments almost everywhere. And, well, you may know me for being quite snarky with my comments sometimes. I'm very much aware of that. But I'm doing my best to change that over time, because I'm frankly not liking the way I'm sometimes treating others either. If anything else, my reputation is at stake too :P And besides, moderators are humans too, right? (Well, except Bill the Lizard, maybe -shrug-)
Oh and yes, I'll continue to be active here in the coming months. My visit streak is at 348 days as of this nomination phase, just less than three weeks shy of a full year! The last time I broke that streak was last November, when I went under the knife after being found with appendicitis. I'm not usually this sick, but obviously that was one time I was definitely not supposed to be here ;) I'm OK now, though!
Last but not least, at the end of the day I'm only sincerely hoping to improve myself so I can do a much more effective job at lending myself to improving the site for the rest of us. Whether I'm a moderator or not, though, I shall continue to contribute to the site to the best of my efforts and my ability. I'll definitely work to prove myself either way, and if I get chosen as a moderator this round or in the future, that'll certainly be another privilege, on top of one I already have of working with Stack Overflow itself.
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meta questions: 50 / +786
meta answers: 244 / +1,953
helpful flags: 702
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posted Nov 7 '11 at 22:36
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meta questions: 31 / +403
meta answers: 30 / +175
helpful flags: 1359
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posted Nov 7 '11 at 22:09
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The hard facts
- Membership length: Almost three years
- Reputation: 29K+
- Primary tag activity:
.net and c#, but have answers in over 900 tags, (with over 100 having at least five answers in those tags)
- Badge requirements: Fulfilled (also have the
Copy Editor, Electorate badges, the gold variants on the Strunk & White and Civic Duty badges respectively)
- Questions are low in quantity (11), but high in quality (8 in 11 have a vote sum > 2, 3 in 11 have a vote sum > 15, 2 in 11 have a vote sum > 30, note this isn't something that I'm proud or ashamed of, but it reflects that I believe in quality over quantity)
- Answers often, (usually multiple times a day) with an average reputation of 24 per post
- In the top %0.55 of Stack Overflow by reputation (#331 all-time as of this writing).
- Microsoft MVP for over 10 years in the Visual C# proficiency (since the proficiency's inception)
- Creator of sf4answers.com, a SO-clone related to the fighting video game community. To that end, questions here and on meta are geared towards gaining a deeper understanding of SO (not just the technical, but the intent), which will benefit moderation duties.
Stances on moderation
In case you can't make it to the next two town hall chats for the candidates, I figured I'd answer some of the most popular questions posed to candidates at the last town hall chat for election:
A diamond will be attached to everything you say, including
questions, answers and comments. Everything you will do will be seen
under a different light. How do you feel about that? - badp
I've been a Microsoft MVP for over ten years; one of the tenants of the award is professionalism, and our activities in the peer-to-peer space are monitored to see if we maintain that professionalism.
I've been under the microscope for a long time, and I've not expected that to end anytime soon. It's natural for me; common courtesy and professionalism are always integral to how I approach anything, whether on SO or elsewhere.
Based on your observations of current SO diamond moderators and
Meta.SO and thus diamond moderation policy, how long do you think it
would take for you to learn the ropes and be comfortable with the
diamond mod tools, and why? - waiwai933
To quote Albert Einstein:
I never think of the future - it comes soon enough.
Seriously though, there will be a learning curve, and I will be aggressive in "getting over the hump" as quickly as possible.
In that time, however, I will approach issues I am unsure about the way I would any other, collaborating with my peers, learning in the process, and abstaining until I am convinced that the course of action is the best one for the community.
If I had to put a hard number on it, I'd say somewhere between one to two months (that might be a little aggressive, but I've yet to experience the full breadth and width of what I'll have to pick up).
Would you suspend a user who repeatedly posts replies to their
questions in answers instead of comments who has been told of the
proper procedure, and if so, for how long? If not, what action would
you take instead, if any? - waiwai993
It depends on the user's intent; if it's clear that the user is flagrantly disregarding proper procedure in the face of being politely told otherwise, then yes, I would suspend a user. How long would be dependent on the user's activity, it would have to be a period long enough to have an impact.
Suspending a user for a day when they come to the site once every two weeks will have little effect.
If I cannot find any information that the user has been informed of the proper procedure then I will do so in the comments, suggesting that the user add it as a comment. I'd then monitor the user's behavior for a little bit, and inform my fellow moderators about that user's activities.
What's your top reason why you want to be a moderator? - George
Stocker
I like to help. It's why I was awarded an MVP position (another tenant, helping others in a peer-to-peer environment). It's why I created sf4answers.
The more ability I am given to help individuals or groups as a whole, I take. Being a moderator will allow me to bring a better SO experience to all and I'd take it as a source of pride to be able to say I helped do that in some small way.
And I like diamonds. =)
Do you think it's the role of the moderator to calm down
condescending, arrangant, disdainful, or aggressive answers or
comments not really helping the user the question? - Pierre
303
If it is a singular comment/answer, etc, then it might be able to be easily defused by a polite comment, and it takes little time to do that. While one might be a moderator, that doesn't mean that one should bring the sledgehammer down when a regular hammer will do.
If it's a full-blown comment war, then no, it's not the role of moderator to calm down these situations, it's the role of the moderator to stop/fix them with the tools given to them.
Additionally, it should be said that the SO community does a great job of policing these things themselves with flags, something that helps all moderators. I believe in the flagging policy and the community's use of it.
For those of you with low MSO rep, do you read questions and answers
on MSO? If not, do you think this will impair your understanding of SO
policy, and why? - waiwai933
It's exactly this reason that I'm to engaging more in meta (sometimes sucessfully, sometimes not so much), without that contribution, I won't be able to do my job as moderator effectively; contributing in meta more will only help me with getting over the hump mentioned above.
Q: What should be done with Questions and Answers that are flagged
for "low quality"? Do you think they should be treated
differently? - Bill the Lizard
There's little context around this, but low-quality posts degrade the system, and that is a bad thing. Low-quality posts would be deleted. Of course, ones which are debatable in quality would be discussed with fellow moderators and the community.
Related question: How would you deal with a user who produced a
steady stream of valuable answers, but tends to generate a large
number of arguments/flags from comments? - Shog9
I'd defer them all to Shog9 ;)
I think this case is simple, you don't deal with the user, you deal with the comments through moderation.
If the user's overall net effect is negative (and extremely negative at that) then you deal with the user.
Question: Do you consider yourself addicted to stackoverflow, and in
what ways (good and bad) does it impact your life? - Adam
Davis
I don't consider myself addicted, but that's a subjective view. My wife might consider otherwise. =)
Good ways are obvious; I get to contribute and help others, and I get to learn in the process. That satisfies a core part of who I am.
The bad ways? Well, I joked about my wife earlier, but there are times I'm trying to put that finishing touch on an edit and it's not the most opportune time, and I might put off other things at times to do such things, but generally I can't say my life is out of balance because of it.
SO has been very good to me, and I want to be very good to it.
How do you feel about losing your close votes? - badp
I don't mind at all, the community has so many available to them and it's been shown that they can put them to good use. I'll have other more prominent concerns to address as moderator.
Since @MichaelMrozek mentioned burnout, how can you avoid getting
overwhelmed to the point that participating isn't fun anymore? And how
can it be identified before it's "too late" in fellow mods? -
Rebecca
Communication is key; no moderator is an island.
Keep up the lines of communication; if the communication is starting to wane from generally accepted levels, then that might be the first indicator.
Question: When should questions be closed and just left alone vs.
when should they be closed and deleted? That is, when do you believe
in deleting content? - Brad Larson
I've already stated that if the content is of very low quality, then it should be deleted. If the content is offensive or hateful in any way, it should be deleted.
However, there are a good number of times where the question might have a better life on another SE site, or if it is of questionably low quality, a nudge (in the form of a comment) can encourage a user to turn low-quality content into good content.
Deleting should be aggressive when the content is of an obviously detrimental nature to SO and the community; other means should be used when it is not.
There are more questions, but I really like and want to answer this one:
PERSONAL PHILOSOPHY QUESTION: Ability to edit other people's answers
- great SO feature, or greatest SO feature? - Shog9
It is a great feature, but it is not SO's greatest feature, IMO. The vote is SO's greatest feature; so much of what is done on SO is predicated on the vote, it opens/closes gateways to so many other features which serve to encourage the community to help keep the system running in a healthy manner.
I love that we can edit posts and take great pride in doing it (as I've done it quite often), but to me, the vote and all that it enables is the single greatest feature of SO (IMO).
General Philosophy
This election, I didn't just "throw my hat into the ring", that was what I did the last time I nominated myself, not approaching it with the seriousness it deserves.
Since then, there's been time to reflect on the position, and as to whether or not I truly want it. My answer is a resounding "yes". This time, I approach the election and the position with a seriousness, passion, and commitment that the position demands.
Reputation is important. It's the quantifiable cornerstone of what Stack Overflow is built on.
The pursuit of reputation, however is not important. What is of more importance are the actions one takes to foster the community in a positive direction (one of the reasons for the badge requirements, I gather, which I fully support).
That said, I've long been an advocate of improving the quality of the experience for everyone at SO; editing posts for spelling and grammar mistakes, formatting code for readability, voting to close/migrate posts, flagging posts (never out of spite or malice, but always with the goal of improving the overall quality of the question and/or system).
These are things that there are no (or difficult to acquire) metrics for. They are tedious and thankless, and yet still must be done in order to keep the quality bar high.
These are the tasks that I take joy in providing, knowing that the actions I take based on the care I have for a better experience have a real, lasting effect.
I am a passionate believer in the neutrality that a collaborative, wiki-like site such as Stack Overflow strives to maintain. I believe in this so much so that I've never had a problem voting/flagging my own content for removal in order to improve the overall quality.
Why I believe I should be one of your next moderators
I've never asked nor expected thanks. This is why being a moderator is perfect for me. I revel in the tasks that I know must be done (just look at my reputation gain over the last year vs. the past two years); the work is it's own reward.
Being a moderator is allows me to do more of this work and on a greater scale. It enables me to do what I love and provide for a better user experience for all.
I'm passionate about helping. As a creator of a Stack Overflow clone, I've been able to combine my passion for technology and for helping others.
I'll bring that same passion to the moderator role when elected.
Q&A
Come to next the town hall meeting (or two!) for moderator election nominees, and ask ask ask!
That's up to you! Be aggressive and ask the questions in the comments that are important to you in the comments.
Ask the things you feel you must know about your candidate that will guide your decision in this election.
I'll answer everything with the same transparency that I will bring to my actions as a moderator.
Thanks
A sincere thank you to all for reading and for any support you provide.
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meta questions: 76 / +804
meta answers: 280 / +2,277
helpful flags: 142
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posted Nov 7 '11 at 20:30
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If a community moderator is needed, I'm ready to be one. I have all the required badges including 3 yearling badges. My flag weight has been over 600 for quite some time and I agree with the criteria for moderators stated in the call!
Stack Exchange makes the internet a better place, I have learned incredibly a lot here on SO and other SE sites and I'm trying to give back as much!
I'm mainly active in the php tag and related tags where I think moderation is especially needed due to the vast amount of very basic questions by new members or non-members.
I'm already moderating on a regular basis but it would be an honor to become an official community moderator on the single most influential website in my professional life!
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meta questions: 8 / +7
meta answers: 8 / +291
helpful flags: 519
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posted Nov 7 '11 at 21:49
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Big contributer to the javascript, php and jquery sections of Stack Overflow.
All in all a big participant for the most part over the past year.
Active participant in the javascript and php Stack Overflow chat rooms.
Has been editing and flagging correctly (for the most part) on all questions that are a good to the SO community at large.
I hope to improve quality and answerability on the site through moderation :-D
As seen from here I am able to help make changes to the community when it is needed and am an active participant in meta and I don't let those meta downvotes keep me down ^_^.
Side note:
I am the creator of The SO Conundrum which has not garnered much much success as of now, but hopefully it will in the future :-)
And as a last ditch effort, some bold words to draw your attention :-D
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meta questions: 166 / +336
meta answers: 167 / +502
helpful flags: 555
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posted Nov 7 '11 at 20:09
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I've always been impressed with the moderation system here, and when I saw the Badge requirements for this cycle and realized I could qualify, I thought I would toss my hat in the proverbial ring.
I have earned all of the badges noted. Not only have I earned the Deputy badge, but I am actually one of only 86 to have earned the Marshal badge, for post flagging weight. I firmly believe that SO is as great a site as it is because of the standards of conduct and the structure for questions and answers, and as a 10k moderator, I have tried to use the tools available to do my part to help keep the site useful.
I have been a member for 1 year and 10 months, and most of my activity has centered around answering questions on C#, ASP.NET, MVC, SQL Server and many related items.
One place where I likely am short compared to the other nominees is on Meta participation. In fact - I only just now earned the required Convention badge (I needed one more post with 2+ votes). I have used Meta mostly to search for information when I have a question about the use of one of my moderator tools, and have not concentrated on its use that much. I would change that as a Community Moderator (and plan to anyway, now), but I figured I'd mention that!
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meta questions: 25 / +322
meta answers: 205 / +1,407
helpful flags: 9573
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posted Nov 7 '11 at 21:31
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I'd like to nominate myself for StackOverflow moderator. I am very active in the community -- mostly within the C# and general .NET tags -- and frequently help moderate questions and answers (either by improving them if possible or voting to close/delete or flagging) using the 10k+ user tools, but I feel like I would be a helpful addition to the formal moderating team.
Why?
I've been a member of StackOverflow for more than two and a half years. In that time, I've committed myself to making SO a better site, and my interaction has (hopefully) been in line with that goal.
Qualifications
- I have a good handle on grammar and punctuation (son of an English teacher; sue me), and I try to give a helping hand to questions where the meaning is clear with some effort, but language issues might prevent them from getting the high-quality answers they deserve.
- I am available during the peak StackOverflow hours (the workday in the western hemisphere) and frequently answer and moderate questions during this time.
- I have experience with other forms of internet moderation (e.g. forum moderator, panel discussion facilitator, etc.)
Moderation Policy
While personally no stranger to the close vote (or delete vote when it's warranted), I tend to be fairly inclusive when it comes to the questions that I come across. Questions that are blatantly too broad (asking for someone to write a complete application, for example) I'll generally close--especially if they come from someone who's been around the block and should know better--but I'll also try to help the user either define what their question actually is or give a couple of suggestions to get them started so that they can come back with a specific technical question.
I think that moderation should take the long view; after all, the purpose of StackOverflow is to provide the internets with a resource for finding solutions, not necessarily asking questions. To that end, I generally tailor my moderation practices to favor questions that have a lasting, broad appeal, or those that strike a good balance between specificity and generality. With that said, I still personally try to help users (or at least point them in the right direction) even if their question isn't well suited to the site.
So...now what?
If you've taken the time to read my nomination, then thank you! I'm guessing, though, that I haven't answered all of your questions. If so (or even if not), please come to one of the scheduled Town Hall meetings and ask away; I'm currently scheduled to attend the first meeting (Tuesday, 11/15/2011 at 9:00pm Eastern), but I will make every effort to attend the second meeting as well, assuming that work obligations allow for it.
As a great man once said: tuna, eggs, Doritos, cheesecake, tamale; see ya!
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meta questions: 1 / +5
meta answers: 17 / +109
helpful flags: 21
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posted Nov 7 '11 at 20:32
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I would like to nominate myself as a moderator, although I imagine I will eventually get muscled out in the reputation stakes.
I have been a member on the Stack Exchange network for little over 18 months. My rep on Meta isn't too shabby and I'm already a Moderator over on Web Applications.
Of late I haven't been too active (answering questions) on Stack Overflow. If elected, I'd be more interested in the moderation of the site rather than hitting the rep cap every day.
I always evaluate a question on its own merit and take action accordingly. I feel that I am firm but fair and don't discriminate or hold grudges over past conflicts - everyone is entitled to their own opinion. Sometimes, I might get things wrong and I have absolutely no problem admitting it.
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meta questions: 27 / +119
meta answers: 126 / +466
helpful flags: 90
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posted Nov 7 '11 at 21:17
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I would like to give it a try as well.
I perform almost exclusively maintenance related tasks on pretty much a day by day basis. I was quite shocked myself to find out that I have missed only 15 days out of 437 days.
I am quite active on Meta and I am as well quite frequently in the MSO Tavern. I have gained most of my reputation in the android tag being a professional Android developer. I also run the Android chat room where I'm trying to establish a place for developers to just hang out together.
I think that I would make a good moderator because I am pretty active and because maintaining the site is something that I enjoy. I am also trying to educate new users to improve their experience on this great site.
Obviously I am not someone with a lot of reputation but I try to make best use of my privileges.
Yes, I have all the required badges. ;)
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meta questions: 9 / +98
meta answers: 43 / +217
helpful flags: 223
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posted Nov 7 '11 at 21:14
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About Me:
I'm a student in real life, and I've been a member of StackOverflow for nearly two years. I know the Stack Overflow system well; I've had a lot of time to observe moderators. I would be honored to have the privilege and responsibility of moderating.
Participation:
I'm an active contributor in the objective-c and ios tags. I have both asked great questions and provided insightful answers. (I've occasionally ventured beyond the usual tags as well.) Also, I once put together a userscript offering a minimalist theme on any site in the StackExchange network.
I participate on Meta and I listen to the podcasts. I'm often in the MSO Tavern.
Qualifications:
I am good with spelling and grammar, which qualifies me for the day to day tasks of moderation. I can admit when I'm wrong (see my comments on this answer) , which is important when moderating. (I also can voice my opinion when necessary.) I've done my fair share of editing until now and I see no reason to stop. Being a moderator would give me the opportunity to edit more effectively.
Palm Card:
Oh, I'm the first Stack Overflow Moderator candidate to have a palm card
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meta questions: 58 / +164
meta answers: 45 / +198
helpful flags: 133
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posted Nov 7 '11 at 20:48
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I'm gonna go ahead and toss my hat in the ring. Should be good for a laugh, as once the more prominent netizens enter the race I'll likely get flushed out by rep cap.
I've got several sites on the Stack Exchange network where I'm active, including Stack Overflow, Meta Stack Overflow, Database Administrators and English Language & Usage, so I'm rather well versed in what it means to be a mod. I'm also pretty well always available on chat.
I am also a moderator on some non-stack exchange sites, and I lead some local user group sessions, so this is already something I'm doing. I definitely enjoy being of service to a community and pitching in where I can. Other reasons to elect me would probably include my rather extensive involvement in the stack chats, my mid-level rep here on the site (yes, 6.8k is a little low), and the fact that adding filler to my paragraphs looks better, since they're more flushed out. And now, a joke:
This is an object-oriented system. If we change anything, the users object.
Thank you thank you, I'll be here all night.
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meta questions: 80 / +609
meta answers: 121 / +648
helpful flags: 138
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posted Nov 7 '11 at 20:44
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