A group for DIY Drones moderators to discuss best community management practices.

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Moderator Basics

These are the basic instructions for moderators:

Most of what you'll be doing is approving (or not) blog posts and otherwise keeping things running smoothly.

With blog posts, the key things to check before approving are:

  1. Does the post start with an image/video or at least have one very close to the top?
  2. Are videos embedded? (Not a link to a video elsewhere)
  3. Is the post informative, rather than asking a question or a request for help? (Those should be sent to the discussion forum).

Feel free to make modest edits (such as moving a photo to the top, or turning a video link into an embed) yourself. If the post should be in the discussion forum instead, paste the text into a Friend request to the author explaining that and delete the post. (Using a Friend request will hopefully take some of the sting out of having to reject their post ;-) )

When Moderating Comments:

Deletion is really the course of last resort, and tends to cause more trouble than it solves. Instead, we follow this escalation process: 

  • 1st course of action in case of TOS abuse: Gentle note in the comments asking people to play nice
  • 2nd: Edit the comment to remove offending piece and add: "[Moderator: Text edited to comply with site TOS]". It's nice to PM the member with an explanation, warning
  • 3rd: Lock comments. Also PM member with explanation/warning
  • 4th (only in cases of gross abuse): Delete comment. PM member
  • 5th (very rare, and only after multiple warnings): Ban member

Our Culture and Values:

Mark Harrison, one of our star moderators, articulated our culture and policies best with this post, which I'll just quote verbatim:

Here's my general feeling about a lot of things on this site; in fact, it's pretty much my general philosophy for large parts of my life:

        "It's more important to enable good things than prevent bad things"

For diydrones, this generally means:

--Be generous in accepting blog posts. We're not at a point where there are more submissions than can be confortably digested in a day. Likewise, the term "drone" is evolving at such a fast rate it's hard to pin down exactly what it means for everyone. So, I'm happy to lump in quadcopters, FPV, gimbals, RC, artistic aerial videos, electronics, radios... all kinds of stuff that meets my nebulous criterion of "generally interesting to the diy drone community."

Now of course it can be protested, "what if we're flooded by dozens or hundreds of posts on marginally related topic X?" And my response would be, "let's wait until that happens; we'll have tons more context and it will be easier to make a specific decision then than make some globally encompassing set of rules now. We may all even be a little bit smarter and a little bit wiser!"

-- Be generous in approving users. Lots of people aren't comfortable with revealing too much information about themselves, or may not have a particularly cogent reason for joining a site. I'm somewhat of an exception to this case... "Are you asking what I'm interested in? Let's talk about me, it's one of the most interesting topics we can discuss, don't you agree?" But for a lot of people, they may interested in the topic, but not interested in telling you why.

-- Feel free to make mistakes, and be nice when other people are making mistakes. Sometimes the most interesting things happen when things go awry. For better or worse, sometimes the most education things as well!

I think this is pretty much in agreement with how the site has been run historically. It's a site for amateurs, by amateurs (keeping in mind the defintion of "amateur"... from the French "lover of"), and as such has had a pretty wide-ranging scope of what's acceptable. That's served the site well, enabling it to be as relevant (or even more!) in 2013 as it was when it was founded.

Of course there are big exceptions to this "don't sweat the bad stuff" philosophy -- brain surgery, rocket launches, and skydiving come to mind -- but I think it's a useful guideline for a site such as ours.

 

More instructions:

Guidelines

When is a blog not a blog?

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Comments

  • Developer

    @Dean, you don't really need to reply to me. I sent out the mail to make sure the new mods where onboard with this group. When mod issues a re discussed here it seems that not many responses are happening as part of that discussion. Hopefully more mods will see issue raised and respond.

  • Moderator

    Not sure if I am to reply Bill Bonney but I received your site wide Mod call? I guess if anyone is not setup to receive notifications then they wont get an email from you... 

  • Moderator

    Probably not a front page blog but have no problems raised as a discussion.

  • Moderator

    I'm OK with site status postings. Especially when the top level page seemed to be down due to hosting issues. FWIW!

  • Developer
    http://diydrones.com/profiles/blogs/diydrones-com-website-closed-in...

    This isn't front page news, and posted by a mod. The mod should have asked here n this list first?

    comments?
  • Developer

    The other question is, have the new mods actually clicked the 'follow' button for the discussion list here. If they have not, they don't get timely information of Mod topics.

    I don't usually mod here, I kind keep out the way, but bring up points i notice. . The topics I asked about Volta seem to get no discussion going on, so either there is another channel for mods to talk or no collaboration is happening. 

    It's seems a little housekeeping is in order. I'm sure everybody's doing their best. 

  • Moderator

    I think that the blogs getting approved aren't quite the same quality, no. 

    But we lost a disruptive site member shortly after, so it's a wash, right?! ;)

  • Moderator

    easily pinpoint the day that us new folks came on board

    is that because things got worse, or because things got better?

    HT to the new mods, I would vote for the latter! :)

  • Moderator

    @Bill - I think it's been long enough since the new batch of moderators (myself included) came on board that we don't need to tiptoe around the issue anymore.

    I think someone's judgement regarding approving blog posts needs a little work. Chris posted a link awhile back that included rough guidelines on blog posts. That should really be viewed as a checklist for each and every blog post approval. 

    I'll approve a new member in about 15 seconds if I see them, but I don't even look at the blog posts until I'm back at my computer and can look at those guidelines for what makes a good blog post. 

     I think that anyone could go back and look at the last 2 months of blog posts, and easily pinpoint the day that us new folks came on board. Let's tighten it up a bit.

  • Developer

    http://diydrones.com/profiles/blogs/flyboard-air-test

    I though blog posts are not just video post, they need text as well

This reply was deleted.
100KM

commercial advertisment post

Hi dear moderators, Recently I notice there are some " pure " advertising post from Skywalker / TopXgun ect. Where some of the post being deleted some make it to the blog post. I'm not really sure if this type of " blog " have a place here or we should delete it. As for the Skywalker, I saw their blog being deleted and a few day latter they post again with some minor modification, but still look 100% " advertisement " to me. It seems that they do " NOT " get the message or understand what their…

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Developer

Commercial Groups on DIYD

I think we need to discussion about 'commercial' groups like this new one i just noticed (especially since as the site is getting bigger)http://diydrones.com/group/outdoor-roboticsA quick visual search through gave me these 'commercial' looking groupshttp://diydrones.com/group/voltahttp://diydrones.com/group/ugcshttp://diydrones.com/group/uavsaShould we not be thinking that groups created by commercial enterprises require some form of sponsorship of the site or development work in the DiyDrone…

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3 Replies