• ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠
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    711 hours ago

    It depends on the needs of the community. Some need a “curation” style, some need a “cultivation” style, and some need a laissez-faire style. I’ve been a moderator in all three kinds, and I moderated with a different ethos in each.

  • Blaze (he/him)
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    1113 hours ago

    The community belongs to the members. Don’t ever lock a community or try to move it to another instance without consulting the community first.

    We all left Reddit for a reason.

  • @[email protected]M
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    2516 hours ago

    Positive contribution to a community is more important than following the rules strictly. If a thread technically is against the rules, but is relevant to the community and has positive interaction, it usually gets a pass from me.

  • @Zonetrooper
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    813 hours ago

    Be fair and equitable. There are times when strictness benefits a community, and there are times where laissez fair, laid-back moderation benefits a community. But nothing hollows out a community like moderators being unreliable or unfair.

    If you’ve got a “don’t be a dick” rule and someone is making a point you agree with but being a dick about it, you still have to step in. If you’re having a bad evening, don’t let yourself be extra hard on people because you’re angry or rushed. Etc.

  • Scrubbles
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    1215 hours ago

    Number one rule is don’t be a dick. If I notice tone is going more towards personal attacks or being mean rather than honest arguments that’s where my line is. If you can’t get your argument out without resulting to insulting someone then it wasn’t a very good argument.