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.