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2025 Moderator Election

nomination began
Mar 11 at 20:00
election began
Mar 25 at 20:00
election ended
Apr 2 at 20:00
candidates
4
positions
2

On Stack Exchange, we believe the core moderators should come from the community, and be elected by the community itself through popular vote. We hold regular elections to determine who these community moderators will be.

Community moderators are accorded the highest level of privilege on our community, and should themselves be exemplars of positive behavior and leaders within the community.

Our general criteria for moderators is as follows:

  • patient and fair
  • leads by example
  • shows respect for their fellow community members in their actions and words
  • open to some light but firm moderation to keep the community on track and resolve (hopefully) uncommon disputes and exceptions

Every election has three phases:

  1. Nomination
  2. Primary
  3. Election

Please participate in the moderator elections by voting, and perhaps even by nominating yourself to be a community moderator!

Additional Links

Questionnaire
The community team has compiled questions from meta for the candidates to answer.
  • How would you deal with a user who produced a steady stream of valuable answers, but tends to generate a large number of arguments/flags from comments?

[Answer 1 here]

  • How would you handle a situation where another mod closed/deleted/etc. a question that you feel shouldn’t have been?

[Answer 2 here]

  • What, in your opinion, is the purpose of Stack Exchange in a period when many questions can be answered in seconds through Generative AI? Do you support integration of AI into Stack Exchange sites? If so, what value do you feel such integration would add? If not, what value do you feel Stack Exchange provides without AI?

[Answer 3 here]

  • In your opinion, what do moderators do?

[Answer 4 here]

  • A diamond will be attached to everything you say and have said in the past, including questions, answers and comments. Everything you will do will be seen under a different light. How do you feel about that?

[Answer 5 here]

  • In what way do you feel that being a moderator will make you more effective as opposed to simply reaching enough reputation to access moderator tools or become a trusted user?

[Answer 6 here]

I'm not a mod anywhere else and I'm just here to make the other guys and girls look better in comparison. Vote early and often.

Questionnaire
  • How would you deal with a user who produced a steady stream of valuable answers, but tends to generate a large number of arguments/flags from comments?

[Answer 1 here] treat them like mods in other stacks do

  • How would you handle a situation where another mod closed/deleted/etc. a question that you feel shouldn’t have been?

[Answer 2 here] be forced to ignore it

  • What, in your opinion, is the purpose of Stack Exchange in a period when many questions can be answered in seconds through Generative AI? Do you support integration of AI into Stack Exchange sites? If so, what value do you feel such integration would add? If not, what value do you feel Stack Exchange provides without AI?

[Answer 3 here] have no say in what stack exchange employees do to add AI

  • In your opinion, what do moderators do?

[Answer 4 here] in my experience? [Answer redacted]

  • A diamond will be attached to everything you say and have said in the past, including questions, answers and comments. Everything you will do will be seen under a different light. How do you feel about that?

[Answer 5 here] mods should have two accounts, one privileged and one not. Priv'd should only be used for necessary reasons.

  • In what way do you feel that being a moderator will make you more effective as opposed to simply reaching enough reputation to access moderator tools or become a trusted user?

[Answer 6 here] it's overused.

Hello and good time of the day! I'm working with embedded platforms since 2001 and Raspberry Pi and the SBC revolution is a part of my daily research and practice. I'm a moderator at Tor.StackExchange for 9 years with a small break, and SBC's are my passion. I'm making my Linux+BSD kernel distribution public, so I'll be a way deeper in SBC's now, so I'm glad to serve this community I'm already a member of for some years

Questionnaire
  • How would you deal with a user who produced a steady stream of valuable answers, but tends to generate a large number of arguments/flags from comments?

In my opinion the value of the information is the key priority. Arguments are the truth's birthplace, and flags can be handled and resolved as they should be. It's better to have more users like the type specified in the question: the community will have a good review and commit base.

  • How would you handle a situation where another mod closed/deleted/etc. a question that you feel shouldn’t have been?

I will contact the mod and will ask why it was done - if it will be a questionable ground. If it's valuable for the community or it's not done yet - I'll reopen it and put my statement when doing so and be open for discussion

  • What, in your opinion, is the purpose of Stack Exchange in a period when many questions can be answered in seconds through Generative AI? Do you support integration of AI into Stack Exchange sites? If so, what value do you feel such integration would add? If not, what value do you feel Stack Exchange provides without AI?

As a biophysics scientist and AI engineer I'm totally for integrating AI! And for opening datasets to the public for more experimentation to come forward: it can be parsed out either way, so why don't we offload it by making dumps like Wikipedia? AI is a tool - so, it can help a lot - if applied properly.

  • In your opinion, what do moderators do?

They are helping the community to grow and advising with their practical experience

  • A diamond will be attached to everything you say and have said in the past, including questions, answers and comments. Everything you will do will be seen under a different light. How do you feel about that?

As a mod already at the other community I can say - it's a form of service and help commitment. It's not just a tool set available to you and a diamond tag - it's a great responsibility

  • In what way do you feel that being a moderator will make you more effective as opposed to simply reaching enough reputation to access moderator tools or become a trusted user?

It can give and it will require more deeper involvement in the matters. So - anyway - I'm diving deeper in a modern and old SBC's right now, and I'd love to share the knowledge and help

Greenonline

Hi there, I've been a mod over in 3D Printing for some years now.

I am what some may call a "Pi Enthusiast", although I have heard "nerd!" muttered under people's breaths.

I have a number of clustering setups, using Zero, Zero 2, CM3, CM4, Pi4/400 units. I'm no way an expert, but I do enjoy the odd tinker or two.

Questionnaire
  • How would you deal with a user who produced a steady stream of valuable answers, but tends to generate a large number of arguments/flags from comments?

First discuss the issue with my fellow moderators to see if it really is an issue, and then if need be, bring the issue up in a private chat room, and discuss, with the user in question.

  • How would you handle a situation where another mod closed/deleted/etc. a question that you feel shouldn’t have been?

Bring the issue up in the mod chat room and discuss to arrive at a consensus, that can be acted upon, if need be.

  • What, in your opinion, is the purpose of Stack Exchange in a period when many questions can be answered in seconds through Generative AI? Do you support integration of AI into Stack Exchange sites? If so, what value do you feel such integration would add? If not, what value do you feel Stack Exchange provides without AI?

I am firmly against the use of AI, w.r.t to providing knowledge - I can not emphasise that fact enough. AI has its place, but that place certainly isn't here on Stack Exchange...

  • In your opinion, what do moderators do?

As little as possible! A moderator should just do what the name suggests - moderate tricky situations, not generate them. Handling flags is the main occupation, followed by stepping in to handle problematic users only when the situation necessitates it.

Replying, where they can, to the community's questions on Meta is (generally) another responsibility of moderators. In addition, submitting Meta posts that float new ideas for the odd initiative can be (seen as) productive - but let's not go crazy: new (or old) mods should not try to suddenly remould the site into their own "authoritarian" likeness.

Unilaterally closing questions and answers is something that a moderator should not do, unless absolutely required (in the case of spam and/or abusive content). The closing of questions and answers is something for the community as a whole to decide, not just one person.

  • A diamond will be attached to everything you say and have said in the past, including questions, answers and comments. Everything you will do will be seen under a different light. How do you feel about that?

Similar to answer #4 above - as a moderator you have to be painfully aware that you can't really express personal preferences - you need to approach issues while wearing a "Stack Exchange hat". If you really do need to express a personal preference, then it needs to be made very clear that a view is your own personal view and not that of the site.

  • In what way do you feel that being a moderator will make you more effective as opposed to simply reaching enough reputation to access moderator tools or become a trusted user?

It probably won't.

Scott Earle

Greetings all. I am nominating myself as a moderator in the Raspberry Pi SE simply because not many people with moderation experience have put themselves forward.

I am a moderator on the Expatriates SE (I am an UK expat who has lived in Thailand for 21 years), and on the Amateur Radio SE (I have had an amateur radio licence since 1989, and have had an interest in radio since about 1984) for several years now.

As well as being interested in very technical subjects (my job is Software Engineer, my hobby is Amateur Radio I am into all things techy), I have been a user of Raspberry Pis since the original Pi was available for purchased in Thailand. I have been fascinated by electronics since the early 1980s.

Questionnaire
  • How would you deal with a user who produced a steady stream of valuable answers, but tends to generate a large number of arguments/flags from comments?

[Answer 1 here] I would talk to the user to see what they think the issue is, and keep an eye on their posts in the future - as well as moving "chatty" (or argumentative) comments to chat as soon as possible. This is a Q&A site, and not a chat room.

  • How would you handle a situation where another mod closed/deleted/etc. a question that you feel shouldn’t have been?

[Answer 2 here] I would raise the issue in the private chat room for this SE, and discuss why the mod felt that it was necessary to take that action. Hopefully after the discussion we would understand whether the action taken was warranted, and either undo the action, or agree that it was OK.

  • What, in your opinion, is the purpose of Stack Exchange in a period when many questions can be answered in seconds through Generative AI? Do you support integration of AI into Stack Exchange sites? If so, what value do you feel such integration would add? If not, what value do you feel Stack Exchange provides without AI?

[Answer 3 here] I think it is good to have a site that people can go to where questions are answered by people with experience in the subject, and not just something created by a potentially poorly-trained AI. Personally, I would keep AI out of SE. I feel that people with experience have more to say that is of value than an AI.

  • In your opinion, what do moderators do?

[Answer 4 here] Importantly, keep spam and scammers off the site. Also keep answers relevant, keep chit-chat to a minimum, focusing on high quality answers to well-written questions.

  • A diamond will be attached to everything you say and have said in the past, including questions, answers and comments. Everything you will do will be seen under a different light. How do you feel about that?

[Answer 5 here] There are times that being a mod means not taking part in the site the same way that a regular user does - for example, users vote on closures, but if a mod clicks on 'close' the post is unilaterally closed immediately. It means taking the role responsibly, and thinking before taking action on the site - but being a mod on two other SEs for several years, this is something I am used to.

  • In what way do you feel that being a moderator will make you more effective as opposed to simply reaching enough reputation to access moderator tools or become a trusted user?

[Answer 6 here] It means I could take swift action on spam and abusive messages, and not have to wait for others to vote, or for a mod to take action.

This election is over.