4 Nov 2021 |
joepie91 🏳️🌈 | of course, implicit in this is that the moderation team does their best to handle this in a timely manner | 16:25:03 |
jonringer | The timed ban was more or less meant to allow a "grace period" in which not everything is an emergency for the moderation team | 16:27:03 |
jonringer | people can be aware for periods at a time. And I don't think it's a sustainable model for permanent solutions to always be the one avenue | 16:27:37 |
jonringer | * people can be away for periods at a time. And I don't think it's a sustainable model for permanent solutions to always be the one avenue | 16:27:42 |
jonringer | I would also like to get away from instances like blaggacao's ban here it's like, "we made a long term ban, but don't provide any details." | 16:28:45 |
joepie91 🏳️🌈 | I mean, I call it 'permanent', but it's not really 'permanent', more 'untimed' | 16:29:21 |
jonringer | A long term ban should have enough "supporting evidence" that the community will also agree with actions taken by the moderation team. | 16:29:23 |
joepie91 🏳️🌈 | I have unbanned people in the past after everything from 5 minutes to 5 years | 16:29:38 |
jonringer | untimed and permanent are the same thing with less letters | 16:29:45 |
joepie91 🏳️🌈 | not quite; untimed bans have a terminal condition | 16:30:03 |
joepie91 🏳️🌈 | permanent bans do not | 16:30:08 |
Jonas Chevalier | In reply to @joepie91:pixie.town Jonas Chevalier: I feel like most of the complexity of RFC98 is honestly not in the rules, but rather in the mechanisms - it is essentially an attempt to establish a non-authoritarian, non-hierarchical moderation approach in the context of a world which does the exact opposite Half of the issue is the undertone of the document, and the defensive attitude of the document. I think it's important to start on a positive footing like the SerenityOS rules. Of course we would need to tackle on an enforcement mechanism on top of it. | 16:30:15 |
joepie91 🏳️🌈 | (I probably shouldn't have said 'permanent', that was my mistake :p) | 16:30:24 |
jonringer | Jonas Chevalier: Again, I think SerenityOS has the benefit of someone being the deciding authority on what values are important. And his presence allows for them to be adhered. We don't really have that in nix | 16:31:18 |
jonringer | eelco is very "lassez faire" when it comes to community interaction, and we are largely just a collection of nerds making nixpkgs work | 16:31:44 |
Jonas Chevalier | eelco mostly cares about technology | 16:32:05 |
joepie91 🏳️🌈 | In reply to @jonringer:matrix.org A long term ban should have enough "supporting evidence" that the community will also agree with actions taken by the moderation team. I would phrase it differently: a long-term ban should be justifiable to the community - sometimes that means showing receipts for behaviour that everybody agrees is bad, sometimes that means explaining in detail why a seemingly-okay behaviour is actually problematic and they refused to work on it.
but this is true whether or not you enshrine it in policy, really; if you cannot justify your moderation decisions, then you will have an uprising on your hands. I do think there's some value in formalizing this to avoid the "rules don't say we need to justify bans" argument in the worst case, but I don't think it's a crucial pillar of formal moderation policy
| 16:32:17 |
jonringer | In reply to @zimbatm:numtide.com eelco mostly cares about technology And I would say the same for the vast majority of the community | 16:32:20 |