TeamSkyFans said:
Can I suggest, when members they report a post they receive notification of any infraction as a result. You can report a post, and on the surface nothing happens. That can mean that for instance, if you report a long standing poster for something, and you see no obvious sign of disciplinary proceedings that either your report has been considered invalid, etc. Some feedback on reports would be helpful to those who do report posts.
Some notifications are more valid than others, but all of them get processed and evaluated. The vast majority gets acted upon one way or the other. They will become part of the "awareness pool", even when they are not acted upon directly too.
Speaking for myself, I have been giving those that reported issues that I dealt with feedback when it wasn't publicly visible, or at least tried to acknowledge the receipt. I might have missed one or two as it adds yet another layer of not being on the site for fun to my day, but I know where you are coming from.
And yes, I have noticed that mods to show a tendancy to warn generally within the threads more and more (susan has always been a great one for this, i think public warnings have far more effect that private ones).
Maybe it would be helpful to start looking forward more than bringing up how you felt it was, as if that is still the reality out there at the moment? I know that long-standing posters have built up frustrations and ways-of-doing-things over time, but sometimes it is justifiable to revisit an impression and check if it is still a frustration that is worth hanging on to? Or if it is better to give feedback on current progress (or not) on what it is like now?
I always preferred a public appeal to common sense, over intervention and infractions, bans, etc. Polite appeal also tends to be the first line of communication with posters, publicly and privately.
I have made many a public post appealing to common courtesy of users, long before I became a mod here. I can say without hesitation that intervening is the last thing we want to do here, with our time. It isn't always (directly) effective, but even then it makes it clearer to all at which point, on the whole, we do want to curb behaviour (when we stumble across it).
One frustration I have is that people tend to debate even the most simple appeal, and small things get blown up and become unwelcome distractions in their own right.
A simple "move on" (with no edits, modding, warnings, infractions) can trigger several follow up posts.
But I do agree, it is probably more effective in the long run, and hopefully makes those public interventions rarer over time.
If anything, it makes people aware that there are behavioural rules they agree to when they use the forum to make posts, and flags to people who are being targeted that it is not acceptable behaviour, and we don't condone it.
At the same time there are people who get the feeling they are being watched by Big Brother. So there has to be a balancing act of sorts. Even if I personally think that that impression is a bit much given what we do let through unchallenged, and the level of actual interventions that we engage in.
People also invent mantras that don't resemble reality at all, and fly away with it. We have dealt with exactly
one incident,
one poster who engaged us through a route that used an external service to engage us on "our terrain", and somehow it has become "opinions of posters elsewhere about CN is also taboo and monitored". That is laughable.
First, once again: the thing that we frowned upon had nothing to do with content, but with actual behaviour. And second, we do decide in the end if people are welcome to come through our door. This is not some Free Speech Geneva Concention gathering where you can say anything off-topic that you want, where you are free to insult others as you see fit, where you can subject people to pester campaigns, and anything goes.
We have a cycling website that people can use for their posts if they accept the rules that apply to all of us, and users are welcome if they get what is reasonable behaviour, and what isn't. Escalating unreasonable behaviour has consequences. We probably don't have rules for everything, and we sometimes need to act after someone has found yet another way to be unreasonable that we don't have "guidelines for", but it is always with people that we run into time and time again, and take up far too much of our attention without showing enough consideration, if any, from their end.
By all means, debate the principle here, but don't portray a single incident into some golden rule that applies to all. That is nonsense on speed.