I was wondering, one thing i don't see often on GAF is mod warnings in threads.
In the portbegging example for instance, a post going "ok, further port arguments will be punished" or the like, instead of straight out banning, wouldn't have been better? I have seen a few of said posts in my time on GAF, but relatively few.
In the forum i moderated a few years back, that was usually the course of action, especially for OTs, but for other stuff, too (including warning users getting heated).
I'm not necessarily saying GAF should do it, but i'm wondering if there's a reasoning behind it, if it's even a deliberate choice or what.
I guess GAF is too big for such a measure?
I cannot speak specifically about why we do not do warnings for portbegging in particular; I have not banned a single person for portbegging yet because those are not the sort of topics I spend time reading.
But on the subject more generally, for me, the point of giving a warning is usually that someone has slipped but there is some sort of extenuating circumstance where I do not think it merits moderating, but I still want to clarify that it is not okay as a general rule so that other people do not see that person doing it, see that nothing has happened to them, and think it is okay and then start doing the same thing in other threads. In most instances, however, I think someone should know better, so I just usually do not feel like there is a compelling reason to warn instead of ban.
I also try to be more judicious about when I warn rather ban because I have found that they can sometimes backfire. I have given warnings, and on a few occasions I have received indignant responses in the thread at the implicit threat or private messages either from the specified user or from friends, admonishing me that I was incorrect to have given a warning. I do not like being ganged up on or outnumbered in a topic or derailing a topic with a debate on moderation policy any more than any other user does, so I try to be more sure that a warning is actually warranted over a ban and that it will be well-received, and that I communicate more clearly when I do (because there have been misunderstandings over my failure to fully communicate what I was doing).
But this is just me; I do not know why other moderators do or do not do warnings.
A random question, is there a female mod right now? For some reason I thought Mumei is a she but I guess I am mistaken in that.
It is okay to admit you have a crush on me. :3
The problem I have with the community forum is I think it's a negative thing for a thread actually growing as a community. Something in regular OT is more likely to get more eyes on it, so if some threads get that benefit I don't see why others don't. Ideally I'd just ditch the whole thing entirely but I'm not the boss, yet.
On the other hand, it is also true that in a sub-forum with a more limited number of pages, it is more likely that a topic with a smaller fanbase would be seen than one that has hardly any activity and is never on the first few pages of Gaming or Off-Topic.
It is an imperfect system, but it is not without its potential advantages for smaller sub-communities.
I would immediately ban for calling another user retarded, the others, eh, depends on context.
I agree, yes.
I mean it stops existing for me. I might do so. Although really this forum is too large. I originally spend most time on gaming, now I do it on off topic. Due to the size of the forum you will inevitably focus on some parts of it.
You got an avatar! I do hope my nagging you had something to do with it.
And I lost track of topics in Community for awhile myself, but as time has gone by I have started reading them again. I don't know why I didn't click the Community tabs for so long. It is not as if the topics were different; they were just in a different spot. There was some sort of "out of sight, out of mind" aspect to it, I think.