Additional moderator(s) sought for ubuntu-users list - clarifications
On 28 September 2011 08:57, Colin Law <clanlaw@googlemail.com> wrote:
> Alan, I think you could throw some light on this thread and possibly > remove some of the heat, by clarifying the situation. *The subject > asks for *additional* moderators. *Does this mean additional people to > spread the load of whatever moderation is currently imposed or is it > intended that the level of moderation is to be increased? > It is what it says. Additional moderators. You're right though some clarification wouldn't hurt. Personally speaking I love mailing lists. I love that the mail comes in to my mailbox and I can sort/filter it as I wish. I love that the mail can be read from pretty much anywhere on any device using almost any speed connection from high speed broadband to the worst GPRS or 9600 baud dial-up. Mailing lists are efficient when compared to forums for example. They allow for more verbose questions (and answers) than IRC. Without mailing lists the Free Software community wouldn't have progressed to where it has. Mailing lists are great! I realise many people do not like mailing lists, and as such the Ubuntu project has numerous ways for people to get support. There's the aforementioned forums and IRC channels, and more recently we have sites like AskUbuntu. People will gravitate towards the system which provides support they want in the way they want it, that's pretty clear. There's a real set of users who reside "on the forums" and another set who provide support on IRC. There's of course overlap, some people reside in all of the communities, but there's a significant chunk who don't. In each of the non-mailing list areas we have moderation. This is not new or revolutionary. Neither is it draconian or authoritarian. It's pragmatic and designed to ensure that the people who want to get support can get it, and those that want to give support don't get burned out or frustrated when doing so. IRC has operators who will remind new and problematic users of the 'house rules'. They try to keep conversation on topic in #ubuntu (and other channels) and when things get out of hand they have the tools necessary to take action. This can be in the form of muting people so their chatter doesn't appear in the channel, or removing problematic users from the channel entirely. There is an appeals process so users who feel they have been incorrectly moderated can have the decision reversed, or indeed upheld. Users can go to the IRC Council and if their needs aren't resolved they can take it further to the Community Council. I've witnessed this first hand over the last few years. It works. Ubuntu Forums have a similar process involving the moderators, forums staff and again a forums council. Ask Ubuntu is quite new but very quickly built up a system of moderators and editors who keep things in check. None of this should be a surprise to anyone who hasn't been living under a rock for the last 7 years. We moderate support channels in Ubuntu to make them accurate, efficient and friendly places. If you don't want accurate, efficient and friendly then there's plenty of other places to get support. If you want an anarchic playground, set one up, elsewhere. Mailman mailing lists are a bit of a different beast. Someone can subscribe to the list and send mails to all ~5000 subscribers of this list very easily. The barrier to entry is very low. That's great! Someone can get their support request out very quickly to a huge number of people who can potentially help. Those people get the mail near-instantly and can reply promptly. Those subscribers have actively opted into the ubuntu-users list to receive support requests and choose which ones to reply to. When things go wrong it's not as easy/straightforward as IRC/Forums/AU to get 'fixed'. The tools available in mailman are pretty brutal. We can switch the mailing list to become fully moderated. That means every mail has to be vetted before it goes out. This isn't something I'd advocate. It would place a massive workload on moderators and slow down the list tremendously. Right now we have an open list that anyone can join. If someone is a persistent problem (offensive, persistently offtopic, rude, unhelpful and so on) we have very few tools available to moderate them. We can mute them so they can't post to the list from their address. We can unsubscribe them and we can block them from subscribing again from that address. We have used that in the past for a few problematic users who frankly just don't get the way things work in the Ubuntu community. Fact is though that once that offensive mail (or indeed entire thread) has been sent out, it's already in the inboxes of 5000 people. It's not like the forums where we can remove a thread easily to prevent people seeing it or replying to it (continuing the rotten thread). With mailman one offensive mail can lead to a hundred replies, none of which are useful. The problem is that there aren't many active moderators, that is people who read this list. It's a pretty busy list and sometimes threads get missed. The goal of having more moderators is simply more eyeballs to try and catch those instances where one person doesn't spot it. Of course the final option is to just leave it as it is, have less moderators and no moderation. I predict that way the list will just morph into sounder and go down hill in the same way, rapidly. As a final note. I realise some have suggested this is a pre-cursor to shutting down this list. That's not _my_ intention. At the last Community Council meeting (and on at least two occasions on the past 2 years I've been on the Community Council) it's been suggested that this list should be shutdown for good. On every occasion I've argued that the list should be kept open and that it could be turned around and become a valuable support resource for our users. So at the last meeting I said I'd put out the call for more moderators to see if we can keep this a friendly and respectful support channel. Carry on with the crap, and I assure you the list will be shut down, and if it makes people feel better inside to blame me for that then go right ahead. Cheers, Al. -- ubuntu-users mailing list ubuntu-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-users |
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