The article posted on Mashable is a good read on a 25 year woman Alex Chrum's experience as a moderator on the site "Debate.org". As it's clear from the name itself, site is a treasure trove of spam and hateful comments. Some controversial, some racist and some outright insensitive. I think the article's a good for anyone who think a Moderator's job is easy.
Some excerpts from the article:
Read whole article here: When Your Job Is to Moderate the Internet's Nastiest Trolls
The article also list some actual posts which Alex Chrum had to moderate. You can also try to see whether you would have agreed with Alex by guessing whether the post should have been approved or disapproved.
So for what it's worth, I say Thanks to all the Moderators who actively moderate TDF and keep this forum clean from BS.
Now that the article is out of the way, I would just like to ask a few questions to members of this forum:
1. Do you think job of mods is an easy task?
2. Do you think a mod is even necessary? Or do you think moderators suck and you should be given freedom to post whatever you want to post on a forum? (Talking about forum in general, not just TDF)
3. Finally, who do you think should be our Superhero Mod? Or could he be a Silent guardian? A watchful protector? Could he be a hero that TDF needs but not deserve?
Some excerpts from the article:
Most of us don’t see this version of the Internet. Unless you’re the target of an attack by so-called trolls, avoiding the dregs of social media is rather simple. You click away from a thread that turns nasty, unfollow a friend who says something reprehensible, or avoid sites infamous for their Lord of the Flies approach to social interactions. People like Chrum are the stopgap between innocent users and thrill-seekers who want to test the boundaries of common decency. But trying to protect the rest of us online can be a personal sacrifice — one that drains the mind and spirit.
We don’t know much about the inner lives of those who vet the Internet. We take for granted that they try to shield us from the worst content, but we rarely wonder aloud how doing so might affect their happiness and mental health.
Their role in regulating the Internet is largely undervalued. Moderators are but a small part of the inertia that drives the web, and the infrastructure we’ve built to make online communities safe is, at best, a promising improvisation and, at worst, embarrassingly broken. The attacks launched against Williams, Sarkeesian and Jezebel in the span of a few weeks make that much clear.
A useful comparison, she said, might be to think of moderators as the digital equivalent of a police officer or emergency room nurse. Moderators don’t witness the same visceral life-and-death scenes, but the nature of their job exposes them to aspects of the human experience that most of us try to avoid.
On the Internet, that can include identifying child pornography or reviewing rape or death threats. Over time, Englander added, most professionals find a way to break their lives into pieces, separating themselves from the trauma they see, and maybe even becoming desensitized to it.
She could quickly reject some comments using the site’s code of conduct, but others straddled a faint line between provocative commentary and offensiveness. If a user, for example, states that the world would be a better place without homosexuals, does that count as a violent threat or slur, or is it simply a moral perspective? If someone asks whether it’s ever acceptable for a man to strike a woman, and a user replies that the woman might deserve it, should that be considered appropriate for the “intellectual and thought-provoking conversation” the site says it values?
The process of interpreting a user’s intent wore Chrum down. As she’d try to plumb the psyche of a stranger, Chrum would occasionally glance down at piece of artwork taped to her computer monitor. The small card, decorated with her favorite soothing colors of purple and green, read: “Keep calm and be nice to people.”
The slogan became Chrum’s mantra, but it was hard to follow at times. She had to exercise restraint, no matter how badly she wanted to confront a user over hateful comments.
Read whole article here: When Your Job Is to Moderate the Internet's Nastiest Trolls
The article also list some actual posts which Alex Chrum had to moderate. You can also try to see whether you would have agreed with Alex by guessing whether the post should have been approved or disapproved.
So for what it's worth, I say Thanks to all the Moderators who actively moderate TDF and keep this forum clean from BS.
Now that the article is out of the way, I would just like to ask a few questions to members of this forum:
1. Do you think job of mods is an easy task?
2. Do you think a mod is even necessary? Or do you think moderators suck and you should be given freedom to post whatever you want to post on a forum? (Talking about forum in general, not just TDF)
3. Finally, who do you think should be our Superhero Mod? Or could he be a Silent guardian? A watchful protector? Could he be a hero that TDF needs but not deserve?