I prefer well moderated forums. I honestly can't recall ever intentionally breaking a rule in one, including here.
I think they should only invoke the TOS in significant cases without ambiguity. The TOS is a legal document intended to shield the service provider. Obviously almost no one reads them and it is impossible to argue against them as they are designed to cover all scenarios.
Most posts should be moderated according to a human readable code of conduct.
Permanent bans aren't necessary in most cases. This is especially true because of the long term relationship many players have with Zenimax. Through a 10 year period, any individual may experience a huge array of real life experiences that could affect how they communicate online. A player should be forgiven for making some mistakes while enduring harsh real life challenges. They probably just need a time out.
Furthermore, misunderstandings are normal in all human interactions, but especially in text. There is always an error rate. Therefore, one who posts more, will likely have a greater number of misunderstandings with the mods. There are banned accounts with 4000+ well-intentioned posts because of a handful of misunderstandings or mistakes over the course of several years.
So it's important that ZOS reviews the history of a forum user and asks themselves if they are truly a bad actor.
I think that in most cases ZOS should have escalating suspensions. Even ones that might last a year or more in the case of repeat offenders. Actually permanent bans should only be for significant cases.
I prefer well moderated forums. I honestly can't recall ever intentionally breaking a rule in one, including here.
I think they should only invoke the TOS in significant cases without ambiguity. The TOS is a legal document intended to shield the service provider. Obviously almost no one reads them and it is impossible to argue against them as they are designed to cover all scenarios.
Most posts should be moderated according to a human readable code of conduct.
Permanent bans aren't necessary in most cases. This is especially true because of the long term relationship many players have with Zenimax. Through a 10 year period, any individual may experience a huge array of real life experiences that could affect how they communicate online. A player should be forgiven for making some mistakes while enduring harsh real life challenges. They probably just need a time out.
Furthermore, misunderstandings are normal in all human interactions, but especially in text. There is always an error rate. Therefore, one who posts more, will likely have a greater number of misunderstandings with the mods. There are banned accounts with 4000+ well-intentioned posts because of a handful of misunderstandings or mistakes over the course of several years.
So it's important that ZOS reviews the history of a forum user and asks themselves if they are truly a bad actor.
I think that in most cases ZOS should have escalating suspensions. Even ones that might last a year or more in the case of repeat offenders. Actually permanent bans should only be for significant cases.
Dude.
I caught a warning with reasons given that had absolutely nothing to do with the post I made.
The moderation here isn't great. People should be doing it, not Ai. Ai can't determine context, sarcasm or eleventy billion other nuances people can.
silky_soft wrote: »I prefer well moderated forums. I honestly can't recall ever intentionally breaking a rule in one, including here.
I think they should only invoke the TOS in significant cases without ambiguity. The TOS is a legal document intended to shield the service provider. Obviously almost no one reads them and it is impossible to argue against them as they are designed to cover all scenarios.
Most posts should be moderated according to a human readable code of conduct.
Permanent bans aren't necessary in most cases. This is especially true because of the long term relationship many players have with Zenimax. Through a 10 year period, any individual may experience a huge array of real life experiences that could affect how they communicate online. A player should be forgiven for making some mistakes while enduring harsh real life challenges. They probably just need a time out.
Furthermore, misunderstandings are normal in all human interactions, but especially in text. There is always an error rate. Therefore, one who posts more, will likely have a greater number of misunderstandings with the mods. There are banned accounts with 4000+ well-intentioned posts because of a handful of misunderstandings or mistakes over the course of several years.
So it's important that ZOS reviews the history of a forum user and asks themselves if they are truly a bad actor.
I think that in most cases ZOS should have escalating suspensions. Even ones that might last a year or more in the case of repeat offenders. Actually permanent bans should only be for significant cases.
Dude.
I caught a warning with reasons given that had absolutely nothing to do with the post I made.
The moderation here isn't great. People should be doing it, not Ai. Ai can't determine context, sarcasm or eleventy billion other nuances people can.
I don't think they use AI on here. It's all people reporting you a couple for times because they don't like your point of view. Remember each account has its own forum user.
DenverRalphy wrote: »I'd like to see the inconsistencies addressed.
Just days ago, a thread on this very topic had included a couple of replies from ZOS staff which indicated that in that particular instance, discussing frustrations with the modertion was acceptable since it was providing feedback. But then soon after, another forum moderator stepped in and shut it down for "Bashing" because they determined that that's what the criticism was, and cited that it was against the ToS for bashing ZOS itself.
spartaxoxo wrote: »Human nature being what it is, those who sometimes find themselves in a position where they're hit by moderation will consider the moderation oppressive, while those who never find themselves in that position will consider it spot on.
Personally, I'd like as a standard provision for people always to be notified when their post has been moderated including deletion, and I'm also sympathetic to the argument recently made in another thread that forum disciplinary points should expire after a set period otherwise an errant poster can never learn and start over with a clean slate.
There is a lot of nuance to a slate being wiped clean. Not saying we can't adopt something like that in the long-term. But that conversation will need to take a backseat while we get the conversations around moderation underway.
I think that conversation needs to be forefront. One of the biggest reasons that moderation feels so oppressive IS the points expiration.
I can't speak for others, but for myself one of the reasons that the current direction is so stressful is because points never expire.
Let's create a pretend poster for example.
They have 10,000 posts. They have posted in this forum for 7 years. The community generally thinks of that poster as positive member of the community. They have written guides, tried to be respectful, and are usually informative in their posts.
One time during the pandemic that poster got mad and told someone off they shouldn't have.
Another time, 7 years ago, before they understood back and forth, they didn't actually say anything all that bad but they posted one too many times for someone's liking and ended up banned.
They have not posted anything else bad since then.
This poster would today be in danger of a permanent ban on their next account action. Despite showing 4 years of perfect behavior and 7 years of an overall positive post history across thousands of posts.
Why? Because they messed up twice, points don't expire, and three strikes and you're out.
This profile is not a real person and is possibly slightly exaggerated. But, not by much. That's the lived reality of a lot of posters and it is a major contributing factor in why mods getting it wrong feels so incredibly oppressive.
You could end up permanently banned in 3 years because of a mistake a mod made today.
Just wanted to follow up on this real quick. The reason I noted that it needs to be addressed long term is because there is far more work and systems that need to be discussed when addressing a system like that. That involves a whole set of teams that are independent from me and have their own thoughts on how that process goes, in addition to legalities. Moderation retooling is something that can actively be addressed between myself and far less people.
Also, the system currently set up is not that strict. I think the example given is a far extreme of what happens now. We account for time and nuance when moderation happens. Again, agree that we should discuss the system, but trying to get what can be addressed now handled first.
Again.. and again.. and again..
This is NOT the safe space you are looking for! This is not a happy place with fluffy unicorns. This is a gaming forum, where people are discussing, reporting and expressing their views on the PRODUCT they bought with their earned money. Sometimes controversial and confrontational. Deal with it.
Going to clarify slightly here. This should be a safe space for people to discuss, report and express their views. Absolutely. And there will be times where that discussion can be controversial and disagreements can (and should) happen. Those disagreements can happen without name calling or trying to ridicule another poster. That also makes people unwelcome to have conversations here. Confrontational does not need to be part of that equation. Conformational implies hostility, and that is not appropriate most cases here.
Again, we are going to chat with some of you in a one on one capacity to get feedback on how we can get to a better middle ground here, and have conversations with our mod team. That way, more open and honest conversations can happen, but folks still feel like their voice can be heard without fear of someone getting hostile toward them.
Also wanted to note that we hear the feedback on having more clearly defined rules, so we will work on that as well.
I prefer well moderated forums. I honestly can't recall ever intentionally breaking a rule in one, including here.
I think they should only invoke the TOS in significant cases without ambiguity. The TOS is a legal document intended to shield the service provider. Obviously almost no one reads them and it is impossible to argue against them as they are designed to cover all scenarios.
Most posts should be moderated according to a human readable code of conduct.
Permanent bans aren't necessary in most cases. This is especially true because of the long term relationship many players have with Zenimax. Through a 10 year period, any individual may experience a huge array of real life experiences that could affect how they communicate online. A player should be forgiven for making some mistakes while enduring harsh real life challenges. They probably just need a time out.
Furthermore, misunderstandings are normal in all human interactions, but especially in text. There is always an error rate. Therefore, one who posts more, will likely have a greater number of misunderstandings with the mods. There are banned accounts with 4000+ well-intentioned posts because of a handful of misunderstandings or mistakes over the course of several years.
So it's important that ZOS reviews the history of a forum user and asks themselves if they are truly a bad actor.
I think that in most cases ZOS should have escalating suspensions. Even ones that might last a year or more in the case of repeat offenders. Actually permanent bans should only be for significant cases.
Dude.
I caught a warning with reasons given that had absolutely nothing to do with the post I made.
The moderation here isn't great. People should be doing it, not Ai. Ai can't determine context, sarcasm or eleventy billion other nuances people can.
manukartofanu wrote: »I prefer well moderated forums. I honestly can't recall ever intentionally breaking a rule in one, including here.
I think they should only invoke the TOS in significant cases without ambiguity. The TOS is a legal document intended to shield the service provider. Obviously almost no one reads them and it is impossible to argue against them as they are designed to cover all scenarios.
Most posts should be moderated according to a human readable code of conduct.
Permanent bans aren't necessary in most cases. This is especially true because of the long term relationship many players have with Zenimax. Through a 10 year period, any individual may experience a huge array of real life experiences that could affect how they communicate online. A player should be forgiven for making some mistakes while enduring harsh real life challenges. They probably just need a time out.
Furthermore, misunderstandings are normal in all human interactions, but especially in text. There is always an error rate. Therefore, one who posts more, will likely have a greater number of misunderstandings with the mods. There are banned accounts with 4000+ well-intentioned posts because of a handful of misunderstandings or mistakes over the course of several years.
So it's important that ZOS reviews the history of a forum user and asks themselves if they are truly a bad actor.
I think that in most cases ZOS should have escalating suspensions. Even ones that might last a year or more in the case of repeat offenders. Actually permanent bans should only be for significant cases.
Dude.
I caught a warning with reasons given that had absolutely nothing to do with the post I made.
The moderation here isn't great. People should be doing it, not Ai. Ai can't determine context, sarcasm or eleventy billion other nuances people can.
Insert forum rules and posts into GPT, and you'll be very surprised at how well it understands the context.
Is there a way to send @ZOS_Kevin messages directly? I tried to PM him some screenshots of especially egregious over-moderation (one in which I received an official warning that basically accused me of terrible things that I wasn’t anywhere close to actually doing, one in which I received a friendly reminder not to “spam” because I responded to a tongue-in-cheek thread with a simple and harmless joke, which was removed from the thread), but his name doesn’t come up when I try to send a direct message.
manukartofanu wrote: »I prefer well moderated forums. I honestly can't recall ever intentionally breaking a rule in one, including here.
I think they should only invoke the TOS in significant cases without ambiguity. The TOS is a legal document intended to shield the service provider. Obviously almost no one reads them and it is impossible to argue against them as they are designed to cover all scenarios.
Most posts should be moderated according to a human readable code of conduct.
Permanent bans aren't necessary in most cases. This is especially true because of the long term relationship many players have with Zenimax. Through a 10 year period, any individual may experience a huge array of real life experiences that could affect how they communicate online. A player should be forgiven for making some mistakes while enduring harsh real life challenges. They probably just need a time out.
Furthermore, misunderstandings are normal in all human interactions, but especially in text. There is always an error rate. Therefore, one who posts more, will likely have a greater number of misunderstandings with the mods. There are banned accounts with 4000+ well-intentioned posts because of a handful of misunderstandings or mistakes over the course of several years.
So it's important that ZOS reviews the history of a forum user and asks themselves if they are truly a bad actor.
I think that in most cases ZOS should have escalating suspensions. Even ones that might last a year or more in the case of repeat offenders. Actually permanent bans should only be for significant cases.
Dude.
I caught a warning with reasons given that had absolutely nothing to do with the post I made.
The moderation here isn't great. People should be doing it, not Ai. Ai can't determine context, sarcasm or eleventy billion other nuances people can.
Insert forum rules and posts into GPT, and you'll be very surprised at how well it understands the context.
Talking about being ignored as a trial player has nothing to do with naming violations.
It couldn't have even made sense.
manukartofanu wrote: »I prefer well moderated forums. I honestly can't recall ever intentionally breaking a rule in one, including here.
I think they should only invoke the TOS in significant cases without ambiguity. The TOS is a legal document intended to shield the service provider. Obviously almost no one reads them and it is impossible to argue against them as they are designed to cover all scenarios.
Most posts should be moderated according to a human readable code of conduct.
Permanent bans aren't necessary in most cases. This is especially true because of the long term relationship many players have with Zenimax. Through a 10 year period, any individual may experience a huge array of real life experiences that could affect how they communicate online. A player should be forgiven for making some mistakes while enduring harsh real life challenges. They probably just need a time out.
Furthermore, misunderstandings are normal in all human interactions, but especially in text. There is always an error rate. Therefore, one who posts more, will likely have a greater number of misunderstandings with the mods. There are banned accounts with 4000+ well-intentioned posts because of a handful of misunderstandings or mistakes over the course of several years.
So it's important that ZOS reviews the history of a forum user and asks themselves if they are truly a bad actor.
I think that in most cases ZOS should have escalating suspensions. Even ones that might last a year or more in the case of repeat offenders. Actually permanent bans should only be for significant cases.
Dude.
I caught a warning with reasons given that had absolutely nothing to do with the post I made.
The moderation here isn't great. People should be doing it, not Ai. Ai can't determine context, sarcasm or eleventy billion other nuances people can.
Insert forum rules and posts into GPT, and you'll be very surprised at how well it understands the context.
Talking about being ignored as a trial player has nothing to do with naming violations.
It couldn't have even made sense.
DenverRalphy wrote: »I'd like to see the inconsistencies addressed.
Just days ago, a thread on this very topic had included a couple of replies from ZOS staff which indicated that in that particular instance, discussing frustrations with the modertion was acceptable since it was providing feedback. But then soon after, another forum moderator stepped in and shut it down for "Bashing" because they determined that that's what the criticism was, and cited that it was against the ToS for bashing ZOS itself.
We are always fine to keep conversations open as long as they don’t turn into targeting individuals, including team members. Everyone is fully capable of engaging in conversations like these without turning to singling people out. This thread conversation has been great about doing that. We also have that noted in community rules.
Bashing and Slanderous Comments: We do not permit the bashing of individuals (including ZeniMax employees), groups, or other companies on our forums. We believe that doing so is neither constructive nor in spirit of our game and community.
Is there a way to send @ZOS_Kevin messages directly? I tried to PM him some screenshots of especially egregious over-moderation (one in which I received an official warning that basically accused me of terrible things that I wasn’t anywhere close to actually doing, one in which I received a friendly reminder not to “spam” because I responded to a tongue-in-cheek thread with a simple and harmless joke, which was removed from the thread), but his name doesn’t come up when I try to send a direct message.
Is there a way to send @ZOS_Kevin messages directly? I tried to PM him some screenshots of especially egregious over-moderation (one in which I received an official warning that basically accused me of terrible things that I wasn’t anywhere close to actually doing, one in which I received a friendly reminder not to “spam” because I responded to a tongue-in-cheek thread with a simple and harmless joke, which was removed from the thread), but his name doesn’t come up when I try to send a direct message.
I think you can't send screenshots through the pm system. Perhaps he will offer you another option to do so once he sees your ping in this thread.
His name doesn’t even populate when I start typing it in to a new message (other ZOS staff’s names do). Could be a weird mobile thing — I’m at my in-laws for the holidays and am not accessing the forums on my normal browser.
spartaxoxo wrote: »manukartofanu wrote: »I prefer well moderated forums. I honestly can't recall ever intentionally breaking a rule in one, including here.
I think they should only invoke the TOS in significant cases without ambiguity. The TOS is a legal document intended to shield the service provider. Obviously almost no one reads them and it is impossible to argue against them as they are designed to cover all scenarios.
Most posts should be moderated according to a human readable code of conduct.
Permanent bans aren't necessary in most cases. This is especially true because of the long term relationship many players have with Zenimax. Through a 10 year period, any individual may experience a huge array of real life experiences that could affect how they communicate online. A player should be forgiven for making some mistakes while enduring harsh real life challenges. They probably just need a time out.
Furthermore, misunderstandings are normal in all human interactions, but especially in text. There is always an error rate. Therefore, one who posts more, will likely have a greater number of misunderstandings with the mods. There are banned accounts with 4000+ well-intentioned posts because of a handful of misunderstandings or mistakes over the course of several years.
So it's important that ZOS reviews the history of a forum user and asks themselves if they are truly a bad actor.
I think that in most cases ZOS should have escalating suspensions. Even ones that might last a year or more in the case of repeat offenders. Actually permanent bans should only be for significant cases.
Dude.
I caught a warning with reasons given that had absolutely nothing to do with the post I made.
The moderation here isn't great. People should be doing it, not Ai. Ai can't determine context, sarcasm or eleventy billion other nuances people can.
Insert forum rules and posts into GPT, and you'll be very surprised at how well it understands the context.
Talking about being ignored as a trial player has nothing to do with naming violations.
It couldn't have even made sense.
Do you mean naming and shaming? As in, the post named someone directly?
Or as in the username it was posted under was deemed to be against the rules. The latter can be flagged on any post because it's the name of the poster that violates the rules rather than the content.
manukartofanu wrote: »manukartofanu wrote: »I prefer well moderated forums. I honestly can't recall ever intentionally breaking a rule in one, including here.
I think they should only invoke the TOS in significant cases without ambiguity. The TOS is a legal document intended to shield the service provider. Obviously almost no one reads them and it is impossible to argue against them as they are designed to cover all scenarios.
Most posts should be moderated according to a human readable code of conduct.
Permanent bans aren't necessary in most cases. This is especially true because of the long term relationship many players have with Zenimax. Through a 10 year period, any individual may experience a huge array of real life experiences that could affect how they communicate online. A player should be forgiven for making some mistakes while enduring harsh real life challenges. They probably just need a time out.
Furthermore, misunderstandings are normal in all human interactions, but especially in text. There is always an error rate. Therefore, one who posts more, will likely have a greater number of misunderstandings with the mods. There are banned accounts with 4000+ well-intentioned posts because of a handful of misunderstandings or mistakes over the course of several years.
So it's important that ZOS reviews the history of a forum user and asks themselves if they are truly a bad actor.
I think that in most cases ZOS should have escalating suspensions. Even ones that might last a year or more in the case of repeat offenders. Actually permanent bans should only be for significant cases.
Dude.
I caught a warning with reasons given that had absolutely nothing to do with the post I made.
The moderation here isn't great. People should be doing it, not Ai. Ai can't determine context, sarcasm or eleventy billion other nuances people can.
Insert forum rules and posts into GPT, and you'll be very surprised at how well it understands the context.
Talking about being ignored as a trial player has nothing to do with naming violations.
It couldn't have even made sense.
So, you already put it into GPT, and it replies that you've violated that very rule with your post?
His name doesn’t even populate when I start typing it in to a new message (other ZOS staff’s names do). Could be a weird mobile thing — I’m at my in-laws for the holidays and am not accessing the forums on my normal browser.
That might be an odd mobile thing. I just sent you a DM to test. If that doesn’t work, then I can reach out to our forum provider on Monday to see if anyone is in to resolve.
Is there a way to send @ZOS_Kevin messages directly? I tried to PM him some screenshots of especially egregious over-moderation (one in which I received an official warning that basically accused me of terrible things that I wasn’t anywhere close to actually doing, one in which I received a friendly reminder not to “spam” because I responded to a tongue-in-cheek thread with a simple and harmless joke, which was removed from the thread), but his name doesn’t come up when I try to send a direct message.
While I try to stay polite, I oftentimes lean towards very direct approaches in discussions. My cultural heritage shows - but it does not translate very well, as it seems. On a gobal forum, I cannot expect that, I admit.
Anyways, on one such occasion where I got another message deleted, the Mod was kind enough to provide me with the information that you can ask the Support to review the complaint.
In the end, that did not change anything, and I still don't really know what qualifies as a "conspiracy", but not at least, it showed me a way in which I can react.
I can hardly tolerate to be criticized without being given an opportunity to react formally, and that was realised.
So I want and need to learn. I felt invited to.
Besides, I wanted to say that I really love the niveau and openness of you fellow seras participating on this thread.
@ZOS_Kevin - your endeavour is very dear to me, as it shows respect, and it hints towards us being perceived.
I can connive those minor problems the game itself might have, and I even sustain to play a Stamblade in PVE.
But when it comes to disrespect in commuication or harsh treatment of customers,
I have a hard time not getting out of patience.
I am so glad this is obviously not the case after all!
katanagirl1 wrote: »DenverRalphy wrote: »I'd like to see the inconsistencies addressed.
Just days ago, a thread on this very topic had included a couple of replies from ZOS staff which indicated that in that particular instance, discussing frustrations with the modertion was acceptable since it was providing feedback. But then soon after, another forum moderator stepped in and shut it down for "Bashing" because they determined that that's what the criticism was, and cited that it was against the ToS for bashing ZOS itself.
Yes, I don’t know what happened in that thread. Kevin was answering posts about the topic and then it got closed. I think every single thread about this topic has eventually been locked. That does not bode well.
spartaxoxo wrote: »Human nature being what it is, those who sometimes find themselves in a position where they're hit by moderation will consider the moderation oppressive, while those who never find themselves in that position will consider it spot on.
Personally, I'd like as a standard provision for people always to be notified when their post has been moderated including deletion, and I'm also sympathetic to the argument recently made in another thread that forum disciplinary points should expire after a set period otherwise an errant poster can never learn and start over with a clean slate.
There is a lot of nuance to a slate being wiped clean. Not saying we can't adopt something like that in the long-term. But that conversation will need to take a backseat while we get the conversations around moderation underway.
I think that conversation needs to be forefront. One of the biggest reasons that moderation feels so oppressive IS the points expiration.
I can't speak for others, but for myself one of the reasons that the current direction is so stressful is because points never expire.
Let's create a pretend poster for example.
They have 10,000 posts. They have posted in this forum for 7 years. The community generally thinks of that poster as positive member of the community. They have written guides, tried to be respectful, and are usually informative in their posts.
One time during the pandemic that poster got mad and told someone off they shouldn't have.
Another time, 7 years ago, before they understood back and forth, they didn't actually say anything all that bad but they posted one too many times for someone's liking and ended up banned.
They have not posted anything else bad since then.
This poster would today be in danger of a permanent ban on their next account action. Despite showing 4 years of perfect behavior and 7 years of an overall positive post history across thousands of posts.
Why? Because they messed up twice, points don't expire, and three strikes and you're out.
This profile is not a real person and is possibly slightly exaggerated. But, not by much. That's the lived reality of a lot of posters and it is a major contributing factor in why mods getting it wrong feels so incredibly oppressive.
You could end up permanently banned in 3 years because of a mistake a mod made today.
Just wanted to follow up on this real quick. The reason I noted that it needs to be addressed long term is because there is far more work and systems that need to be discussed when addressing a system like that. That involves a whole set of teams that are independent from me and have their own thoughts on how that process goes, in addition to legalities. Moderation retooling is something that can actively be addressed between myself and far less people.
Also, the system currently set up is not that strict. I think the example given is a far extreme of what happens now. We account for time and nuance when moderation happens. Again, agree that we should discuss the system, but trying to get what can be addressed now handled first.
Dude.
I caught a warning with reasons given that had absolutely nothing to do with the post I made.
The moderation here isn't great. People should be doing it, not Ai. Ai can't determine context, sarcasm or eleventy billion other nuances people can.
manukartofanu wrote: »Human nature being what it is, those who sometimes find themselves in a position where they're hit by moderation will consider the moderation oppressive, while those who never find themselves in that position will consider it spot on.
Personally, I'd like as a standard provision for people always to be notified when their post has been moderated including deletion, and I'm also sympathetic to the argument recently made in another thread that forum disciplinary points should expire after a set period otherwise an errant poster can never learn and start over with a clean slate.
Unfortunately, you're completely safe here only if you don't post anything at all. Or, if you always praise absolutely everything in the game and the staff whenever possible. From what I can see, you can even provoke others into breaking the rules or openly troll them. As long as no ZOS employee is affected, you can get away with it.
SilverBride wrote: »Has anyone ever successfully had moderation overturned after appealing and explaining?
Is there a way to send @ZOS_Kevin messages directly? I tried to PM him some screenshots of especially egregious over-moderation (one in which I received an official warning that basically accused me of terrible things that I wasn’t anywhere close to actually doing, one in which I received a friendly reminder not to “spam” because I responded to a tongue-in-cheek thread with a simple and harmless joke, which was removed from the thread), but his name doesn’t come up when I try to send a direct message.