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I think you mean the “most profitable in the next 3 months on average” decision. It certainly isn’t the best decision by any other metric.
I think you mean the “most profitable in the next 3 months on average” decision. It certainly isn’t the best decision by any other metric.
Definitely. The best mods stay out of the way unless there’s something harmful to the community. I’ve found it’s best to have clear, practical rules and to enforce them at face value with as much leniency as practical. “Remember the human” applies as much to moderators as it does to users.
Mods like that probably exist. There are also many quiet mods, particularly in smaller communities, who try to govern even handedly. I never engaged in any protests or pushed any agendas until the recent API changes, and am trying to set up an alternate space to help ensure a space exists for the content/community.
Quite honestly, I don’t like moderating or leadership and sort of fell into the role. Now that I’m here though, there’s a sense of duty/obligation that makes it hard to leave.
This sounds like an unfortunate consequence of the evolutionary pressure that has been allowed to take place within humanity for the past ~150 years. Profit is more important than anything else. So of course you’ll have sociopathic “profit-above-all-else” mindsets among influential business figures.