2011 Moderator Election

nomination began
Jan 18, 2011 at 22:00
primary began
Jan 25, 2011 at 22:00
election began
Jan 29, 2011 at 22:00
election ended
Feb 2, 2011 at 22:00
candidates
30 / 58
positions
3

On Stack Exchange, we believe the core moderators should come from the community, and be elected by the community itself through popular vote. We hold regular elections to determine who these community moderators will be.

Community moderators are accorded the highest level of privilege in our community, and should themselves be exemplars of positive behavior and leaders within the community.

Candidacy Criteria

Generally, moderators should have the following qualities:

  • patient and fair
  • leads by example
  • shows respect for their fellow community members in their actions and words
  • open to some light but firm moderation to keep the community on track, and resolve uncommon disputes and exceptions

For the Stack Overflow election, candidates must have all the following badges:
Civic Duty, Strunk & White, Deputy, Convention

…and also cannot have been suspended during the past year.

Furthermore, all moderators must abide by the moderator agreement.

Due to the size of Stack Overflow, moderation is a significant responsibility. As a moderator you will need to dedicate part of your time (at least 30 minutes daily) to help shoulder the load of the moderator flag queue.

Election Process

Every election has up to three phases:

  1. Nomination
  2. Primary (active only if there are >10 candidates)
  3. Election

Their descriptions can be found in the blue notice boxes at the top of each corresponding page.

For questions about the election process itself, you can search Meta, or ask in the election chat room linked in the section below.

Please participate in the moderator elections by ranking the candidates, and perhaps even by nominating yourself to be a community moderator.

I get a lot out of this site, and would be honoured to assist it even more as a moderator.

I have asked a small number of questions, but answered over a thousand. I find that 'teaching' is the sometimes the best way of learning - I like answering questions that lie just on the edges of my knowledge, forcing me to learn just a little more. Sometimes your initial thoughts about the 'best' answer are proved wrong as you craft the perfect reply, or you realise someone else's answer is far better than your own!

But what of moderation?

I'd like to think I would be a very light handed moderator. Quick to remove obvious abuses, but in more nuanced problems I'm able to see both sides of the story.

I have a great deal of experience with such diplomacy - I helped to run a website called Geograph.org.uk, which collects geographical photographs of the UK. I handled all of the complaints raised by landowners concerned about photographs, some of whom were irate, threatening and abusive. I would adjudicate with calm, measured communications: sometimes siding with the photographer, sometimes with the landowner, but almost always to satisfaction of both parties. In some cases, I even turned infuriated correspondents into active site contributors!

Where Stack Overflow is concerned, I'm always mindful that we should be producing a body of work that 'gives good Google', in that we're not just helping an individual with his problem, but trying to ensure those who come later with the same question are delighted to find the answers they seek.

Vote for diplomacy! Vote for a safe pair of hands! Vote for a passionate user!

Vote for Paul Dixon!

PS: In an early version of this text, I mentioned I was in the UK to give some idea of my timezone. Many people appeared to think this unwise. So, for what it's worth, let me rephrase: I'm rarely far from a computer from 0800 to 0000 UTC

I've decided to run for moderatorship.

I am one of the most active users on the site (I've been in the top 15 users for the past year), so I'll be able to moderate large numbers of posts.

  • I'm on the front grounds of the drive to improve questions from new users (particularly code formatting)
  • I try to maintain a civil and cordial tone at all times (and I'd like to think I succeed)
  • I have almost all of the site-building badges (except for Electorate and Taxonomist; I'm eight days away from Fanatic)
  • I'm active in a wide variety of tags (except for mobile and *nix development)
  • I participate in Meta

My name is Dave DeLong.

Allow me to point out a couple of significant items from my profile:

  • 37.5k reputation - I am a worthwhile and significant contributor to the Stack Overflow community.
  • 572 consecutive days visited - Not only am I obsessed to Stack Overflow, I am sadistically addicted to it. This includes answering questions via the hospital wifi while my wife was in labor.
  • I have a answer/question ratio of 51.08. So for every question I ask, I answer over 51 questions.
  • Each of my answers averages over 3 upvotes (31.9 rep/answer).
  • I have consistently averaged a gain of ~60 rep/day. Behold the linearity.
  • My expertise in the areas of Cocoa and Cocoa Touch development would add a rich dimension to the moderators on the site.
  • Significant badges earned: Strunk & White, Pundit, Guru. Gold badges in "iphone" and "objective-c", and a silver badge in "cocoa" (~70 votes away from the gold badge).
  • I'm the author of a comprehensive and open source Objective-C framework ("StackKit") for accessing the Stack Overflow API. http://stackkit.com
  • I wear my Stack Overflow t-shirt to work. ← this should be all the proof you need.

In case it's not already obvious, I love Stack Overflow! I love the community of learning and exchange, and hope that I will be considered as a worthy contender for moderatorship.

I've always been more interested in maintenance tasks than posting; I sprinted to 3k in a couple weeks so I could edit and close and then mellowed out a bit. I live in the 10k tools pages these days, and spend almost all my SO time on maintenance stuff: fixing posts by new users (oh how I love /review), retagging, going through spam/offensive flags, and checking active [un]close/[un]delete votes.

I'm constantly flagging things for mod attention, and they're almost always acted on, which is probably a good sign. I also spend a ridiculous amount of time on meta, and I've posted the comment "you'll have to wait for a moderator to fix that" entirely too many times. Mod tools are very helpful for solving whole categories of problems (reputation confusion, merging accounts, suspicious voting patterns, etc.), and I'd rather help people with them directly then tell them "the good news is this is fixable; the bad news is I can't do anything about it"

Finally, I'm a pro-tem mod on the Unix and Linux SE, so I'm familiar with what mods do on a daily basis. And so far they don't hate me there yet, so I'm not terrible at it, but they have far (far) fewer requests for mod help than SO does, and I'd like to help here as well

I would like to volunteer.

Reasons why I'm a good choice:

  • I am very active on Stack Overflow and Meta
  • I fairly assess each question on its own merits (a quick glance at any of my answers on Meta should confirm that).
  • I care about Stack Overflow. I spend most of my time on Stack Overflow playing to my strengths: Clarifying bad questions, closing questions that cannot be saved, and re-opening questions that are misunderstood.

In everything I do on Stack Overflow, I try to use good judgment and editing to make Stack Overflow a 'better place'.

I've been a Stack Overflow user for two years, as well as an avid user of several other Stack Exchange web sites. I'm a retired pro-tem moderator from Webmasters SE and did my very best to help turn it into a successful site. At the time, moderator nominations were conducted on individual meta sites, I was nominated and accepted. Unfortunately, this collided with a life altering job change and schedule. Things have settled again, and I miss moderating. I was also the operator of a (now defunct) SE 1.0 site. I had the idea that a SE site for startup companies would work, so did several other people.

One of the things that attracts me to Stack Overflow and other sites in the network is that the community runs pretty much everything. My view on moderation is that we're here to do what the community can't, while giving a bit of time to behind the scenes maintenance and upkeep to ensure that all visitors have the best possible experience.

The biggest difference in my opinion between moderators and users, beyond access to special privileges, is accountability. I'm ready and willing to be held accountable for every action that I take as a moderator. I think it is an absurdity to expect that everyone will like every action that you take as a moderator. I really value this community, and I will work to ensure it continues to thrive. That might mean locking something that found its way into StumbleUpon and received fifteen 'thank you' answers in an hour, or letting someone know through a variety of available tools that their behavior simply isn't acceptable for our community. I'm confident that the majority of my time will be spent doing more rewarding things, like asking people heavily vested in tags that lack tag wikis to create them.

Typically, I let the community speak with their votes and flags before taking action unless I'm certain that not taking action immediately would be detrimental to the community. Examples would be obvious SPAM or blatantly abusive behavior.

I don't have as much free time as many others, but I do spend a significant amount of what time I have on SO. If elected, that time would be even more productive. I tend to be on-line approximately 15 hours a day, active on SO and other SE sites at least 3 hours daily. My Skype ID as well a a link to a page that sends me e-mail is on my profile.

A little about me:

  • Husband & Father
  • I work in the web hosting industry - That 'cloud' thing. Mostly I work on low level tools, APIs kernels and hypervisors.
  • Home is both US and Asia. We try our very best to visit a new country every year
  • I speak English , relatively broken Spanish and enough Tagalog (Filipino) to get by
  • I've been programming for over 20 years, 10 professionally
  • Avid amateur photographer who is ashamed to have little activity on photography SE
  • Free / Open Source software developer (yes, I have commit access to projects that aren't mine)

Notable badges:

  • Suffrage (I tend to use all of my votes, frequently, it's not like they roll over)
  • Strunk & White (I just can't help it)
  • Electorate (I love questions that give me something to do or think about)
  • Sportsmanship (I usually up vote answers before adding something I feel is missing)
  • Pundit (here and on MSO)
  • Convention (I tend to be quite vocal in the shaping of Stack Exchange)

Why do I want to be a moderator?

  • Every time I see something that should be fixed, I feel like I'm adding to someone else's work load by just flagging it. I'm a 10k+ user which means I should be able to fix most things, but the sheer volume of SO is quite taxing. This is equally compounded by knowing how odd flags can be.
  • SO needs diplomatic hands. I know the tools, I know how things work, I have a very good idea of how people work and I want to help.
  • I am a 3k + user on several other sites and can help guide question migration.
  • I'm not easily offended or disturbed, and there apparently was an opening
  • SO is a source of fun for me, I want to help improve it
  • I've moderated before and I fully know what the job entails.
  • Moderators should first and foremost want the responsibility. I do and I know what I'm getting myself into.

Most memorable SO experience:

I helped to translate a question that was asked in Spanish. Someone arrived here and Chrome translated the page, so naturally, they asked a question in Spanish. A few of us pulled it out of down vote city, translated it and it actually ended up getting good answers. Now, I can't remember which one it was, but it is in my history for the morbidly curious. As broken as my Spanish is, it felt good to know enough to help someone.

Low and behold, despite all of that, I'm a POSIX/*NIX programmer who doesn't have a generalist badge :) How could that possibly happen?

Greetings from Norway, great community.

I understand the need to have moderators for a site like this, and would like to nominate myself to this position.

I have been a part of this site since early beta, and have watched it grow in leaps and bounds since then, and don't think that the future will look much different. I want a bigger part in this bright future.

I would like to say that I've always been the poster child for best behavior, but I'm human. You'll find comments on this site which plainly tells people that they're barking up the wrong tree. However, I put much effort into my work on this site, evident in answers such as What are the barriers to understanding pointers and what can be done to overcome them? and Comparing date ranges.

However, neither of those two answers, or any of my other answers, should have much of an impact on whether you should vote on me, since I will still be answering questions on Stack Overflow, regardless of how this election turns out. Also, the work a moderator is required to perform does not hinge on the ability to provide great answers.

So, I nominate myself.

As qualifications, unverifiable as they are by you, the votee, I will mention my 12-year position as board member of the housing complex I live in (32 apartments), so I have some experience with handling things that aren't always cut and dry. People are human, as the saying goes.

As for moderation...

Moderators needs to be the voice of the community. They need to handle the things the community cannot, but which the community would, if they could. This means they have to handle the rough edges, cut the diamond so to speak, by using the moderator tools that aren't available to the rest of the community.

Moderators have power, but with power comes responsibility. To moderate a SE site means wielding that power with a light touch, and only apply pressure when needed.

Personally I would not jump right into it. I would flex the moderator muscles little by little in order to ease into the role, leaning on the other moderators and Meta for advice and guidance.

Anyway, thanks for your time, now back the regular program.

My name is Kevin Kenny, I work as a software developer for a UK web hosting company. I've worked in the IT industry for a long time having been a field engineer, data centre ops supervisor and now for the past few years a software developer. In addition I also architected much of our IIS7 environment and provide third line support for ASP.NET for when the front line guys reach the boundaries of their knowledge.

I've been a Stack Overflow user since the closed beta and over the past two years and five months have been an active participant on the site. I've decided to throw my hat into the ring this year because I think I've now got a good handle on the way the community works and the type of site Stack Overflow aims to be and I think I'd be a good moderator.

I'm a bit of a Windows generalist on Stack Overflow but specifically follow the IIS related tags because that's what I spend a lot of time writing code against.

As a moderator I will always allow the community at-large to decide what is good and what is bad using the conventions and tools available to it - the FAQ, voting, flagging, the close button. However the flagging tools are there for a reason and will act on these notifications sensibly. I don't have a power-hungry bone in my body but do like to see things done the right way and in a fair way. I'm also not a pedant or literalist, and do have the ability to read between the lines rather than take things just on face-value.

So rather than ramble on any further I thought I'd compile a list of what I think is good about me and of course a list of the bad.

The Good Stuff:

  • I have the patience of a saint - I'm happy to spend time fixing up really broken questions and answers where the english is almost indecipherable and I'm looking at a code formatting disaster.
  • I often spend quite a bit of time now merging OP content in answers that doesn't belong into chronologically sane "updates" in the original question.
  • I'm not afraid to politely nudge other users (new users and old-hands alike) where it looks like there's a comment bun fight about to begin and ask them nicely to calm down a bit.
  • I can't abide rudeness - especially to users where it's abundantly clear their english is weak. I find it disappointing when I see 2k+ users who's first language is english preferring to insult rather than use their new found edit privilege to try and improve a post.
  • I can't abide officious, condescending and patronising comments.
  • I use my moderator flags heavily.
  • I work from home and can spend quite a bit of time on Stack Overflow. You can usually see me from around 09:30 until 02:30 UTC and at weekends, so I think my availability is good
  • I can spot a subjective/flamewar question a mile away.
  • In my day job I deal with all sorts of customers, from the clueless, the irrational, the smartass to the old-hats and folks who know what they're doing. This is via our support system, emails and telephone. I guess the point being is that I don't live in a cave and can actually communicate well under all sorts of circumstances.
  • I'm a huge believer in the "be nice" philosophy in the FAQ and will often cheerfully refer other users to this essential guideline if I see something brewing.
  • I'm not afraid to admit when I don't know the answer and will happily consult others before taking a unilateral decision that might affect others negatively.
  • I'm happy to be proved wrong.
  • I like rainbows and waffles.
  • I'm human.

The Bad Stuff:

  • I've not always been a good citizen and did participate (to my shame) in some edit wars with certain individuals back in the early days.
  • I've not always been in agreement with Jeff+Team and have perhaps "shouted" my difference of opinion a bit louder than was necessary, and perhaps with hindsight crossing the border into being insulting. I'm not proud of this.
  • I have once emailed te[email protected] to apologise and promise "not do it again".
  • I don't always concur with some of the views on Meta. That said, if a policy or the will of the community has been accepted then I'll abide by these conventions - I used to see no harm in salutations and sigs. Now they get removed if I'm editing a post.
  • I probably don't spend enough time in "chat", but then time spent chatting isn't time spent answering questions, removing cruft and fixing posts.
  • I sometimes like my cheese left where it is, and not a millimeter out of place
  • I've downvoted Jon Skeet
  • I don't like unicorns or ponies
  • I'm human.

So community, here I am warts and all, I hope you'll consider me worthy material to be a Stack Overflow moderator.

My name is Justin Nelson.

Many of you may recognize me from my work primarily in the Java and C# tags. Or from my involvement on Meta, and maybe for my work on StackWrap4J on StackApps. I hope I have left a good impression and don't need to make a case for moderator.

But the vast majority of you probably don't recognize me. So, this is for you:

I have been a part of this community since the very beginning. (Well almost. I joined near the tail end of the private beta.) I have been consistently visited this site for ~2.5 years, so I know how this community works inside and out. While I primarily answer questions in the Java and C# tags I view a high volume of questions in other tags. I am always up for learning new things.

If you are interested in a more in-depth look into what I think it takes to be a moderator, please see my first blog post ever! (I didn't want to make this any longer than I already have.)

I am very excited to have this opportunity to run for moderator on this awesome site. I would love to join the ranks of Bill the Lizard, Michael Myers, and all of the rest. They do such a great job with the community already and it would be an honor to be listed among them.

My theory on moderation is that less is more. Moderators don't decide the direction the community takes. Their goal is to speak for the community and uphold the principles that it has decided are important.

As a moderator I will work hard to keep the site clean. I will make sure that I moderate fairly. I will often ask for advice from senior moderators. They will be my role models.

I'm not afraid to make the tough calls though. If something doesn't belong on the site, I will vote to move it. Negative comments creating a negative environment - I will remove them.

All in all, I feel like I am a great candidate. I know how the site works. I am fair and unbiased. I am dedicated to making this site a success. I am also willing to listen.

tldr version, read the bold text.

Vote for me!

I would also like to mention that I am always around. I have currently visited the site 197 days in a row. (And I plan on keeping up that streak.) I will be available to deal with issues often - not just at select times during the week.

Also, if you'd like more information, directions on how to contact me are in my profile. Feel free to drop me a line.

I would like to be considered for one of the moderator positions.

My moderation philosophy is simple:

  1. Moderate in moderation, with a light touch but a firm hand, with patience, respect and fairness.

  2. Whenever possible, let the community make its own decisions, using the tools available to them, such as voting and closing. Step in only when this self-moderation process fails.

  3. Pull up the weeds, where I see them.

  4. Keep the end goal in mind, which is to make StackOverflow the best resource available to programmers on the planet.

I am guided by the principles set forth by Jeff and his team, and the guidelines discussed and developed on meta.stackoverflow.com, but I also trust my own instincts. I will listen, and continue to learn, grow and improve.

I am inspired by people like Marc Gravell, who not only moderates with grace and style, but also manages to find the time to contribute exceptionally good new material to StackOverflow on a daily basis.

I would be honored to serve.


You can check out my profiles on StackOverflow and Meta; I believe my body of work speaks for itself. You can also check out my occasional appearances on programmers.SE and Area51.

If you have any questions, you can ask them in a comment here, and I will be happy to answer them.

This election is over.