On Wed, Apr 14, 2010 at 1:05 PM, Seebs [email protected] wrote:
You don’t seem to understand.
It doesn’t matter whether you see them. If they’re sent, they’re taking
up bandwidth for every single reader, and that is a significant cost.
Okay, but if we’re going to take that route, then a moderator stopping a
post removes it from every single reader’s eyes. A moderator banning
someone
means that everyone who didn’t consider it spam or trolling or
inappropriate
or whatever is affected. A moderator a little too happy about their
power
affects every single person.
With this considering the net effect approach, I think the best argument
would be to weigh the cost of people having to deal with spam against
the
cost of a moderator deciding what is spam and removing it, and the risk
a
moderator presents, the likelihood of finding a moderator who can be
trusted
and is reliable, and the avenues of moderation available, what can be
done
if the moderator is unreasonable, and how to decide they are
unreasonable
(of course, we are electing them to hide information from us, so would
we
even know if they were being too heavy handed?).
If enough people think it is a worthwhile trade off then yeah, lets look
into it.
But at this point, people calling for moderation haven’t even qualified
their complaints.
“rampant with security vulnerabilities, and in need of moderation.”
“recent high volume of off-topic posts”
“gotten to an unusable space”
“high volume of off-topic email”
Not one person has given a single example. What are the issues? What if
they
are talking about posts you consider relevant, useful, important?
There
have been several calls to explain
“I can’t see any’off topic’ threads”
“need to clarify specifically what their issue is”
But so far, we’re just taking peoples word that what irritates them
irritates everyone and should be removed. Should we really be
considering
taking action to solve a problem we haven’t identified? How do we even
know
a moderator will help? Maybe the moderator doesn’t have an issue with
whatever posts are bothering these people. Then we’ve created
responsibilities and elected representatives to solve a problem that it
either doesn’t solve, or that was localized to the people calling for
action.
If you want moderation, please explicitly lay out examples of issues you
have, and why you think a moderator would resolve these.