Author: Rolf Tueschen
Date: 11:01:33 11/04/03
Go up one level in this thread
On November 04, 2003 at 13:53:41, Christophe Theron wrote:
>On November 04, 2003 at 00:48:25, Dave Gomboc wrote:
>
>>On November 03, 2003 at 21:05:26, Christophe Theron wrote:
>>
>>>I'm definitely *against* hiding the moderators' work. When somebody steps on the
>>>line, the moderators can contact him by email and/or post a "MODERATION" message
>>>in answer to the offending message. I'm in favor of a public warning.
>>>
>>>When somebody is banned, it deserves a public announcement. If it does not, what
>>>will???
>>
>>When I was a moderator, we emailed the member privately to indicate that their
>>account was suspended, why it was suspended, and the duration of the suspension.
>> The suspension took effect immediately upon the decision of the moderators.
>>Suspensions are (were) quite rare, and there was never a case where the member
>>replied back with a compelling argument justifying their conduct, though if
>>there had been, we could have changed our minds about it.
>>
>>However, we did not post a public announcement. Doing so would only distract
>>from the purpose of the forum. IIRC, sometimes the banned individual themself
>>found another IP address, made a new account, and posted publicly complaining,
>>whereupon we had another account to block! However, if another member posted,
>>asking if someone had been suspended, we would confirm (or deny, as
>>appropriate), and leave it at that.
>>
>>IIRC, closing threads ("thread is closed, new posts will be deleted") was much
>>more common than actual suspensions.
>>
>>Dave
>
>
>
>Keeping decisions secret because of the fear that they would fire up even more
>discussions is the first step out of democracy.
BTW it wasn't for the first time, it was kept secret by the actual team. Take my
word for it. - Thanks for your clear statement.
Rolf
>
>
>
> Christophe
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