SilverBride wrote: »I agree, but I do think any time a post is removed the poster should be told why, even if there was no warning attached to it. To help prevent them from making the same mistake in the future.
I've always been told why a post was moderated (whether that was just "word snipped" or removed). Hasn't happened a lot, but the mods have always explained.
I've always been told why a post was moderated (whether that was just "word snipped" or removed). Hasn't happened a lot, but the mods have always explained.
The messages always contain a passage stating which rule was broken, that's true. But what if we truly can't understand how the deleted post was interpreted that way?
Several users here wrote that they did not get an explanation upon asking, and that there's even the risk that asking could be seen as a provocation (which would be another rule violation and could lead to even worse consequences).
katanagirl1 wrote: »You non-native English speakers sound just fine to me. It’s the native English speakers from America posting things about “should of” done something that just kill me, lol.
I learn English every day online from random people's comments since it's not my native language, and every single time I read "should of" or similar errors I genuinely question my knowledge and doubt that maybe I am the one who gets it wrong. Thank you for clarifying this XD
Language barrier (a lacking vocabulary on my part) and cultural differences can make things difficult.
For example here where I am things like teasing, being sarcastic and witty or a little provocative are quite the norm, and are frequently used in friendly banter and even flirting, so I'm always surprised when something I type for fun without ANY, not even the minimum intention to offend but just joke around, gets taken as an offense.
I'm used to people with "quite a thick skin" and I get disappointed myself when something I say gets taken too seriously or as something bad. I never have the intention to offend or hurt but unfortunately I can get misunderstood. I'm used to think that the intention is what matters, so I tend to justify myself with the mods saying that I genuinely have no bad intentions because it's the truth and I wouldn't know how to defend myself otherwise.
Obviously if someone acts with clear bad intentions there needs to be an action against them. But I find difficult to draw the line for myself on this forum since the way I would express myself in real life with people around me seems to be "too much" for this instance. I get confused and discouraged to comment...
(Sorry for my broken English XD)
SilverBride wrote: »What if someone says something similar to "All your posts are complaints about this thing and that thing and this other thing, and maybe you shouldn't be playing MMOs."
Accusations are being made that may not even be true, and the poster is being told they have no business playing an MMO. There is no way to interpret that other than being critical and making personal judgements about a poster rather than discussing the topic, which is a clear forum rule.
SeaGtGruff wrote: »the problem is on this board is that if there is any HINT of critisism of this game,it gets shut down.
The large number of threads and posts in this forum which are critical of the game would seem to refute that. It might be how you and others feel, but I don't think it holds up.
In fact, occasionally someone will start a thread which basically praises the game or the devs, and THAT type of thread may vanish without a trace, too, so clearly the determining factors cannot simply be whether comments are critical or laudatory, but something more than that.
If you're struggling to find a way to express yourself without bashing or baiting, my best advice is to just step away from the keyboard-- or phone, or tablet-- and go do something else for a while, to give yourself time to depressurize and settle down. Trust me, I need to do that sort of thing a lot!
I've always been told why a post was moderated (whether that was just "word snipped" or removed). Hasn't happened a lot, but the mods have always explained.
The messages always contain a passage stating which rule was broken, that's true. But what if we truly can't understand how the deleted post was interpreted that way?
Several users here wrote that they did not get an explanation upon asking, and that there's even the risk that asking could be seen as a provocation (which would be another rule violation and could lead to even worse consequences).
It's not just the general moderation approach that could do with improvement: the actual moderators should crack down more on the self-appointed moderators: there are too many of them on this forum.
NotaDaedraWorshipper wrote: »I've also seen sexism, homophobia, transphobia, and many other forms of anti-LGBTQ+ that either took days to be moderated and some that weren't moderated at all. Sometimes the people who spoke up against it was moderated but not those comments.
spartaxoxo wrote: »Back when I was a mod for a different game we could take the following steps
Removed but no warned--> removed for very low level offenses. We did not keep track of this and considered these the metaphorical equivalent of jaywalking. I'd consider your example here if it were the site I worked on.
Removed and warned ---> warnings accumulated points and could lead to a ban.
Removed and temporarily banned --> this could happen automatically after too many warnings or instantly if the offense was great enough.
Removed and permanently banned ---> extreme offenses or too many temp bans in a 1 year time period. Permanent bans for too many temp bans only occured after a review of the account history. This was never automatic and we issued very few of these. The vast majority were particularly outrageous things like a user who threatened to physically harm staff.
We only kept track of offenses for so long, I think bans were 2 years but warnings only 1.
Users seemed to think this was a pretty fair system.
I've always been told why a post was moderated (whether that was just "word snipped" or removed). Hasn't happened a lot, but the mods have always explained.
The messages always contain a passage stating which rule was broken, that's true. But what if we truly can't understand how the deleted post was interpreted that way?
Several users here wrote that they did not get an explanation upon asking, and that there's even the risk that asking could be seen as a provocation (which would be another rule violation and could lead to even worse consequences).
NotaDaedraWorshipper wrote: »I've also seen sexism, homophobia, transphobia, and many other forms of anti-LGBTQ+ that either took days to be moderated and some that weren't moderated at all. Sometimes the people who spoke up against it was moderated but not those comments.
SeaGtGruff wrote: »I don't think anyone needs to be afraid to post here, as long as they use self-moderation.
NotaDaedraWorshipper wrote: »I've also seen sexism, homophobia, transphobia, and many other forms of anti-LGBTQ+ that either took days to be moderated and some that weren't moderated at all. Sometimes the people who spoke up against it was moderated but not those comments.
No, users are supposed to report (to the moderators) posts they feel are against the forum rules. I was referring to the common practice by some users of directly replying to another user to tell them they've posted against the rules - doing this is actually against the forum rules. That's what I was referring to when I used the term "self-appointed moderators".spartaxoxo wrote: »It's not just the general moderation approach that could do with improvement: the actual moderators should crack down more on the self-appointed moderators: there are too many of them on this forum.
Users are supposed to flag content that they feel is against the rules. You don't really want to discourage that. It should simply not be assumed that someone flagging is correct.
You can't leave a snarky remark to a troll without getting hit with a trolling warning.
spartaxoxo wrote: »I personally wouldn't report someone for a mildly snarky remark. I think we all get annoyed sometimes and there needs to be room to be human.
No, users are supposed to report (to the moderators) posts they feel are against the forum rules. I was referring to the common practice by some users of directly replying to another user to tell them they've posted against the rules - doing this is actually against the forum rules. That's what I was referring to when I used the term "self-appointed moderators".spartaxoxo wrote: »It's not just the general moderation approach that could do with improvement: the actual moderators should crack down more on the self-appointed moderators: there are too many of them on this forum.
Users are supposed to flag content that they feel is against the rules. You don't really want to discourage that. It should simply not be assumed that someone flagging is correct.
It's debatable. You could argue that the naming and shaming post should be reported to the mods, not mentioned to the one doing the naming, otherwise you're just being a self-appointed mod.SeaGtGruff wrote: »No, users are supposed to report (to the moderators) posts they feel are against the forum rules. I was referring to the common practice by some users of directly replying to another user to tell them they've posted against the rules - doing this is actually against the forum rules. That's what I was referring to when I used the term "self-appointed moderators".spartaxoxo wrote: »It's not just the general moderation approach that could do with improvement: the actual moderators should crack down more on the self-appointed moderators: there are too many of them on this forum.
Users are supposed to flag content that they feel is against the rules. You don't really want to discourage that. It should simply not be assumed that someone flagging is correct.
One exception to that is when someone posts a screenshot that shows another player's account name and character name while calling out something that person is said to have done within the game (such as cheating), and others point out that the OP should edit the screenshot to blank out the account name and character name of the alleged perpetrator, otherwise they might get themselves in trouble for "naming and shaming." Something like that should be okay.
One of the things we’ve always strived for with moderation is leading with education with community guidelines in mind.
We take the use of hate speech very seriously in the official ESO community, and have a zero tolerance policy. Our definition of hate speech is prejudice or hateful comments, slurs, or statements that promote violence or intolerance toward others because of the following: