Are you familiar with the Penalty Box?

The penalty box (sometimes called the sin bin, bad box, or bin) is the area in ice hockey, rugby football and some other sports where a player sits to serve the time of a given penalty, for an offense not severe enough to merit outright expulsion from the contest. Teams are generally not allowed to replace players who have been sent to the penalty box.

It’s not something we looked forward to, but as of tonight, we’re instituting a penalty box on Stack Overflow.

As I’ve mentioned before, our general strategy is to discourage specific negative behaviors, not individual users. We try to let people know when there are problems via direct communication. We don’t hold grudges; if you can address the problematic behavior, you’re welcome back any time. But sometimes you just can’t seem to reach people — even after multiple attempts to contact them and address the problematic behaviors.

There’s only one rule of behavior that really matters, whether on Stack Overflow, or anywhere else:

don’t be a jerk.

How do you know you’re being a jerk?

  • Other users react negatively to your posts, posting negative responses and generally causing a commotion.
  • There is a broad sense of community resentment over your behavior, and you are frequently cited in discussion about the community.
  • The moderators get regular email complaints about your behavior.
  • You make snide or rude comments “behind people’s backs”, in public places.

While there can always be polite disagreement, this level of discontent is unacceptable for two reasons:

  1. it takes up moderator time that could be used to develop or enhance the site.
  2. it actively turns people away from the community, stunting its growth.

So starting tonight, there will be consequences.

penalty-box

If a moderator has warned you via email about behavior, and that behavior continues, for a period of 2 to 7 days, your account will be in timed suspension.

  • Your account will be locked at 1 reputation.
  • Your user page will have a visual indication that you are in timed suspension, and for how long.
  • You will be unable to ask or answer questions.

At the end of this period, your reputation will be recalculated, and your account will resume as normal. As I said, we don’t hold grudges; the point of all this is to address the behavior. If the behavior improves, we’re cool.

(This should probably go without saying, but if the problem behaviors continue beyond the timed suspension, your account is very likely to be permanently deleted.)

« What Stack Overflow Can Teach You
In Defense of Editing »

248 Responses

  1. Hugo Blanco says:

    Wow, nice policy.

    Keep the good work guys =)

  2. Sung Meister says:

    I didn’t know that i could report *jerks* (or assholes) to moderators.

  3. Allen Pike says:

    An interesting question comes up when you’re moderating a community: is it better to delete/ban counterproductive users, or flag them for ignoring? It’s a hard question.

  4. Jeff Atwood says:

    I favor deletion, under the bad apple theory.

    http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/archives/001227.html

    http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/archives/001154.html

    But I also believe that people should first be given an opportunity to *change* their behavior, provided sufficient motivation..

  5. Juan Manuel says:

    I’d love to know who inspired this… (and why) =)

  6. Darren Kopp says:

    …. is there a badge for being the f1rst? or at least attaining it once? if so, let the games begin!

  7. Chris Charabaruk says:

    On a site where accounts are freely gained, what good does deleting an account do? Chances are, the trouble-maker will start creating more and probably even step up his or her poor behaviour, feeling resentment for getting the boot.

    There might be a better way of handling them. I don’t know what it would be, but I’m pretty sure that user deletions will likely just cause more trouble for everyone involved.

    @Darren Kopp: I sure hope there won’t be a badge for this. That would be encouraging the unwanted behaviour amongst the gamers of the site. Best to not report it to the average user after the time in the box is over.

  8. Jeff Atwood says:

    > what good does deleting an account do?

    It matters if you have hundreds or thousands of reputation points, I would think.

  9. JD says:

    If the Stackoverflow penalty box includes a hot hockey-playing babe like the one in your picture, count me in.

    Sadly, these sorts of things are usually Girl Not Included.

    Ah well.

  10. Nathan Bowers says:

    Chris, I bet OpenID will keep people from just creating other accounts to troll with.

    OpenID account creation is kind of a bother, so as long as it’s one click to ban somebody but a lot of clicks for them to come back under a different name, the system should be “self healing” (in Clay Shirky-speak).

  11. Mark Biek says:

    I think this is a great idea, particularly for high-rep users engaging in excessive jerky behavior.

  12. Chad Moran says:

    had a great talk about this with geoff at mix09. Glad to see you guys adding something like this.

  13. GregD says:

    This is one of the better methods of dealing with *jerks* that I’ve read in a while. Knowing that something like this is now in place, it’s likely to make my participation in SO increase of the coming weeks.

  14. Rich B says:

    @Juan: This was instituted to deal with the huge problem of me. Why? Not because of my behavior on SO, but because I refuse to abide by the SO team’s vague threats of consequences should I continue to say what I please on the /unofficial/ IRC channel. The /unofficial/ /unmoderated/ IRC channel.

    So whatever. Jeff and team have decided that no matter where you are on the internet, if you act like what he deems to be ‘a jerk’ you can be held accountable, with no appeal or evidence presented to you.

    A nice policy I would say. Sure to create a much better community for sure. Silence the internet from dissenting opinions, always a good measure.

  15. billy says:

    So, how do we nominate someone for the penalty box?

    Have you already put someone into it?

    I for one know who I would suggest for the first turn.

  16. Jeff Atwood says:

    Rich B — this is hardly specific to you. It’s a general problem with a general (and hopefully working) solution.

  17. George S says:

    As I said in the pseudo-official #stackoverflow channel on Freenode: If this is meant to punish behavior outside of Stack Overflow proper (that is, the Stack Overflow Blog, UV, or Stackoverflow.com), then it is inherently unjust.

    There are a few reasons for this. Let’s say, for instance, that I wanted to impersonate billy (the poster above me), I could do so, and say whatever I wanted, and the only person who’d be affected negatively is billy. I could also impersonate JonSkeet, Jeff Atwood, Jarrod_Dixon, Mark Biek, or half a dozen other users.

    Would it be fair to put them in the penalty box for something I did?

    My point is this: Unless you have a fool-proof method for punishing me for my behavior, then you simply cannot.

    My second point is that in the same way it’s unfair for employers to punish employees for non work-related blog material, it’s also unfair to punish someone on Stack Overflow for things they do outside of the system.

    Now, if you’d like to formally register an IRC channel, and set up Ops and ChanServ, then I’d be more than happy for you to punish bad IRC behavior on IRC.

    Also, if you can publicly show where someone has been a ‘jerk’ and deserves to be put in the penalty box for their behavior on SO proper, then so be it. I think that to be effective, such a penalty box move would have to at least have a public record, so that it cannot seem arbitrary and capricious.

    Otherwise, Democracy is just Tyranny of the Majority.

  18. Rich B says:

    @Jeff: Are you saying that anything I said above is not true? I am not being singled out for my involvement on the /unofficial/ SO IRC channel with vague references to reports I have not seen?

    If behavior outside of SO is going to carry penalties inside SO, there is a huge problem.

    I would also like for you to explain how someone can make comments “behind people’s backs” in /public/ places? I think I should ask since you have been accusing me of doing this.

  19. Cyril Gupta says:

    You’re going to put people in SO penalty box because they said something outside of the website on some other forum?

    Really?

    What kind of sense does this make?

    Good luck searching for SO references in Google and finding out all the ‘bad apples’ and putting them in the box.

    Does this comment of mine qualify me for the box?

  20. Jeff Atwood says:

    > My point is this: Unless you have a fool-proof method for punishing me for my behavior, then you simply cannot.

    Fool-proof systems do not take into account the ingenuity of fools.

    (clarification for Gortok: there is no such thing as a fool-proof system, and if you think there is..)

  21. Rich B says:

    @Cyril: Careful. I was warned and threatened for dissenting comments on the blog before. You might be on the list next.

    You might even get your own email from the team calling you a ‘jerk’.

  22. George S says:

    @Jeff Atwood: Indeed. You wrapped up my point rather succinctly.

  23. Jeff Atwood says:

    > You’re going to put people in SO penalty box because they said something outside of the website on some other forum?

    As I explained in the post:

    They go in the penalty box for multiple infractions across *all* the criteria listed over a period of weeks or months. And this behavior persisted after multiple direct warnings via email.

  24. Roj says:

    I don’t get why you guys are getting worked up over the penalty box. If you’re not a jerk, you won’t be in it. Problem solved.

  25. Rich B says:

    @Roj: If that were true that would be fine. But penalizing users for their actions /outside/ of SO.com is a true injustice.

    The team seems intent on doing this, so I guess people will just have to watch out. I know there are people with blogs about SO and not all of them are nice or polite in how they say things. They are now in jeopardy of being penalized.

    IRC channels are no longer safe discussion areas away from SO.

    Emails? IM conversations? They could be sent in by an offended user too according to these new lines of logic.

    How would we actually verify these reports? How can you prove the text is what the person said? I don’t think anyone cares. Just let random people report anyone from anywhere on the internet with no justifiable record. That will fix things.

  26. JD says:

    Sheer craziness.

    Jeff please ignore the nay-sayers and the whiners. A little violin plays for all of them.

    I’m truly surprised any one user is so invested in trolling StackOverflow that this rule would ever be an issue. As if this were some sort of democracy. Please. Community-driven does not equal democracy and never has.

    They have not boiled the orange sponge donkey.

    They have not trained Jedi for six hundred years.

    They have not become one with the Matrix.

  27. Roj says:

    @Rich B: It seems like there are two concerns here: one, that it’s no longer safe to comment on SO outside of SO; and two, that someone might fabricate reports to get someone else in trouble.

    With regards to the first, there’s a big difference between having dissenting opinions and being a jerk. I have trouble figuring out why it’s a big problem that you’re penalized for being a jerk elsewhere, because it’s perfectly reasonable to dissent without being one.

    To address the bigger point, “why should my actions elsewhere affect my standing on SO” – I think there’s this misconception that the Internet is somehow more partitioned than the real world. If you talk behind a friend’s back and word gets around, can you claim that it’s unfair that your friend is pissed at you because you weren’t speaking to his face?

    As for people out to get you, I highly doubt you would be penalty boxed without having done a few public misdeeds the SO team can actually see. If that’s not the case (and one could be boxed merely upon hearsay) then I think you have a right to worry, because that would be rather unfair. But even then, you’d have to motivate someone to actively be trying to get you penalty boxed… of which a common motivation is being a jerk to them in the first place.

  28. GregD says:

    Exactly JD. To reiterate, community-driven does not equal democracy. There’s also a little thing called “monetization”. Kind of hard to monetize SO if users are leaving on account of people who are eligible for the penalty box as it where.

  29. Rich B says:

    @roj: Unfortunately you mentioned an argument that Jeff made that makes no sense that I have pointed out previously. If you are posting something on the internet, \in public\ then you are by definition not saying anything behind anyone’s back.

    I have never been afraid of anything I say getting back to anyone else. I encourage you to read them. Join in on IRC and see for yourself, or anywhere else I am.

    To illustrate this, here is the log from IRC, everything that can be scratched together at the moment. Someone might have a better source on this, feel free to post it.

    http://welbog.homeip.net/so/

    As for whatever proof is out there, I don’t really care. Anything said in an unrelated IRC channel may be public information, but penalizing them in a different community for it is ridiculous.

    Feel free to go through anything I have done or said on SO and find a reason to report me for this penalty boxing. Many people have and I am sure will continue to. Nothing new here. I have yet to see one justifiable incident of this that has been dug up in all the blog entries talking about this material.

    All in all though, I am more concerned about the widespread use of this arcane logic. I really don’t care if I am put in a box or voted off the island. I did my best, my record speaks for itself. I have nothing to hide.

    If the community wants to have to watch what they do across the internet in case someone reports them to SO, so be it. I know I am not ok with this though.

  30. Rex M says:

    @gortok:

    The penalty box is simply a mechanism to keep the system in line. Saying it shouldn’t be turned on because it might not punish the right user is like saying we shouldn’t go live because we might not be able to scale to a million users. Turn it on now and revisit when it becomes clear it’s not working as intended. Speculation that something *might* be able to be gamed is not the same as demonstrating that it *is* being gamed. I doubt you’ll try getting me banned, because a) you don’t care enough to make the effort, b) there’s a high probability you’ll fail, and c) you’re not an ass. Most other people fit in that box too.

    “It’s unfair for employers to punish employees for non work-related blog material” Believe it or not, that’s not unfair at all. Of course some companies take this to an extreme, ban all criticisms and sometimes ban blogs, but if you are very publicly abrasive, and make it clear you work for company X, you are giving company X a bad reputation. You are not acting in company X’s best interests, which is the first (and arguably only) responsibility of an employee.

    A community is even more sensitive to this than a company. A community doesn’t have profit motivation to bind them together, it’s driven solely by hundreds of individual personal interactions. If one person is consistently causing friction in those interactions, it causes friction for the community. A community naturally extends beyond the physical walls of their meeting place or the virtual walls of a web site. As we’ve seen, the community has naturally extended itself into other mediums. But SO.com is its home, its clubhouse, and so that’s where the community starts and ends.

  31. Mark Harrison says:

    Jeff, good work… and thanks for posting about this, I’m really learning a lot by watching you put together this site. thanks!! maybe you can put this under “tools”?

  32. The other Richard Burgess says:

    One technique I’ve seen some forums employ is to make a user’s posts, comments, whatever only visible to themselves, not to anyone else.

    Apparently they can go a remarkably long time before starting to wonder how come everyone is ignoring them.

  33. toast says:

    Schadenfreude – I has it

  34. Shog9 says:

    Thoughts on recent changes…

    Don’t see the point of making penalty-box residents public. Like an anti-MarkOfCain. It’s dead easy to create new accounts, or just post without one; i’d think marking an existing account would just encourage this…

    As clever as techniques like this or the new secret rules for account deletion might sound, they get annoying fast. Make the rules public so they can be debated and accepted; else we’ll just assume they’re capricious.

    There’s no mention of IRC in the blog post, but Atwood’s follow-up comments seem to support that allegation…

    Jeff, if that’s what this is about, then come out and say it; if not, then stop feeding into it. If you plan on publicly penalizing people for such things, then you should at very least make the complaints they’re based on public as well.

    IRC, like Twitter, lends itself well to idle nonsense.

  35. LKM says:

    “Your user page will have a visual indication that you are in timed suspension, and for how long.”

    This sounds exactly like the kind of thing some people view as a badge of honor.

    Also, punishing people for stuff they do outside of SO seems like a huge recipe for disaster as it can easily be interpreted as revenge. You’re the authority on your site. If you participate in revenge, revenge then becomes acceptable in your community.

  36. Jeff Atwood says:

    To be clear, ALL OF THESE are true.

    * Other users react negatively to your posts, posting negative responses and generally causing a commotion.
    * There is a broad sense of community resentment over your behavior, and you are frequently cited in discussion about the community.
    * The moderators get regular email complaints about your behavior.
    * You make snide or rude comments “behind people’s backs”, in public places.

    Not one of them.

    ALL.

    OF.

    THEM.

    Multiple times, in fact. For more than a month. After repeated emails politely asking for the behavior to change.

    Another hint: if a search for your name returns 30+ emails in the team@stackoverflow.com inbox, that’s a bad sign.

    Any other questions, feel free to email me directly.

  37. Rob Gilliam says:

    “How do you know you’re being a jerk?

    [...]
    * The moderators get regular email complaints about your behavior.”

    Picky, I know, but that would be how the mods know you’re being a jerk. You have no idea what e-mails people are sending about your behaviour.

    Carry on.

  38. Ólafur Waage says:

    @Jeff

    > what good does deleting an account do?

    > It matters if you have hundreds or thousands of reputation points, I would think.

    When you take something away from a child to punish it for bad behavior. It will get even angrier and do things well outside the realm of logic.

    I know this from moderating a large local counterstrike forum and a large international Dark Age of Camelot forum (back in the day)

    I hope you know this to.

  39. Jeff Atwood says:

    Olafur, as I made clear in the post..

    > But sometimes you just can’t seem to reach people — even after *multiple attempts to contact them and address the problematic behaviors*.

    > *if the problem behaviors continue beyond the timed suspension*, your account is very likely to be permanently deleted

    Deletion is a method of last resort. So far, we’ve followed the following procedures to address problem behaviors:

    1) multiple detailed email warnings, spanning months.

    2) n-day account suspension.

    If the behavior persists, then, regretfully, we have to proceed to the deletion option. That’s up to the account holder.

  40. Ólafur Waage says:

    @Jeff What i am saying is that deleting an account will only anger the person further, and now he has nothing to lose.

    “It will get even angrier and do things well outside the realm of logic.”

    I have seen multiple account creation over multiple IP addresses spamming everywhere they can, and getting help from other users, just because some mod deleted or even just banned their account.

    And not just one case of this kind of behavior.

    If this works and the general SO user will act better, then that’s great. Just a note from a fellow community mod.

  41. Razzie says:

    @Ólafur,

    You have a point, but you’d think that your average programmer is considerably more mature than your average Counter-Strike player. And thus, won’t go all beserk on a site like SO just because a fellow programmer was banned or had his account deleted. At least, I sincerely hope so.. having been part of an active Counter-Strike community (also DAoC btw, which was a bit more mature:)

    I applaud this method. I hope it works.

  42. Jeff Atwood says:

    There are consequences to negative behavior.

    That said, it’s the *behavior* we are addressing. No grudges are held. If the behavior improves, we welcome them back with open arms at any time.

  43. gamecat says:

    Great improvement, hope the penaltybox stays empty for a long time. But as a father, I know there must be limits. (And face it, grownups are just aged kids).

    GC

  44. toolkit says:

    Glad to see this being brought in. Some people need to learn a little humilty.

  45. paul bearne says:

    Lets hope that this doesn’t become a badge of honour.

    Do we get to keep the lable after we get out!

    Is there a silver and gold version?

    Paul

  46. Chris says:

    This new feature will be a great addition. Hopefully, just the threat of being banned will be enough….

  47. Clic Upvote says:

    Rich B, racist remarks should be punished whether they are on the stackoverflow channel or on stackoverflow itself. In fact, you would be legally prosecuted for this if you did that in the real world.

    Instead of blaming jeff and the team for ‘threatening’ you, you could do with telling us all what you did to receive this.

  48. Ólafur Waage says:

    @Clic Upvote “racist remarks should be punished whether they are on the stackoverflow channel or on stackoverflow itself”

    The channel in question is not an official StackOverflow IRC channel. Just a channel some people created and some SO users hang on.

  49. Razzie says:

    Btw, I’ve been thinking about joining the StackOverflow IRC channel for some time, as it seemed like fun, you know. But after scanning through some of the channel’s logs… man, am I glad I’ve never been there. I think it just shows that it is not a coincedence that some people get temporarily banned. And I don’t mean that personal.

  50. Quarrelsome says:

    @comments
    Wow….. just…. wow.

    Guys… it’s a programming Q&A site, that’s all. Chill.
    If you get suspended then just chill a bit more. Some people are making out that the inclusion of this is equivalent to the creation of the gestapo.

    Please appreciate that when you get people together (e.g. a community) you have to make compromises at times to be a respected member of that community. Unfortunately all communities have to have a sense of “tyranny by majority” so if your style causes serious issues for other people you might have to mod your style to remain in that community. Sure people suck but they also press +1 which provides joyous rep.

    You can get away with being an arrogant idiot (like I have, thus far) as long as that isn’t your only side.

    Additionally +1 to account permaban causing madness. It does and I wouldn’t recommend it as an avenue to take, especially with irate programmers/h4×0rs I’d suggest just docking significant amounts of rep or giving them permanent Cornify for 6 months.

  51. Quarrelsome says:

    @ “racist remarks should be punished whether they are on the stackoverflow channel or on stackoverflow itself”

    DOWNVOTE.

    Freedom of speech/opinion is important and we should work on social shame as opposed to actual punishments. If you just make these kind of things “illegal” you create a counter-culture that has sympathy for them. See Austria/Germany and Holocaust denial.

  52. Rich B says:

    Well, I have been suspended for 5 days for talking in an seperate IRC channel and apparently for offering a dissenting opinion on the blog.

    Good job team, you have truly kept the community safe from awful, awful things.

  53. Jeff Atwood says:

    > Well, I have been suspended for 5 days for talking in an seperate IRC channel and apparently for offering a dissenting opinion on the blog.

    I would prefer to keep the details of this private, because it’s too much like airing dirty laundry. But let’s just say there are 30+ emails in our team@stackoverflow.com inbox that don’t agree with what you just said.

    Also, since we’re making public disclosures, Rich, would you be interested in sharing any *other* internet forums you’ve been banned from? Hmm? :)

    At least we give people a chance to come back. And you are welcome back, if you can avoid generating 3+ email complaints per week in the future.

  54. toast says:

    Sorry, you can’t have it both ways. The IRC channel can’t both be the place where “the community” gathers to discuss Stackoverflow and monitor the site and be /unofficial/.

    If it is the gathering place of the community, then it is at least semi-official. At the very least, it is sanctioned. If it is /unofficial/, then you have only proven that the IRC channel is a place where the minority of the community group together to try and force the site to its own views.

    And Rich, maybe you will listen to people now. We said your behavior was disruptive, petty, and rude. You kept saying that you were following “community guidelines” and keeping “the spirit of the FAQ”.

    And I personally told you that your behavior and attitude was apparent in your posting, yet you always turned a blind eye to any post mentioning it.

    When you get back, tell me how that crow tastes.

  55. Rich B says:

    @Jeff: None of these reports that you claim to have or what they contain have been made available to me. Therefore it is impossible for me to know anything about what they contain.

    As for any activity on any forum anywhere else on the internet, that has nothing at all to do with SO and what I do on SO. Simply pointing that out really tells me a lot about your level of maturity and your ability to moderate a site like this.

    Really, if this is how petty you wanted to be, you should have let us know that. Why on earth would I care about coming back to SO now that you have made a public offer to temporarily ban or permanently ban me anytime people make enough noise? What do you honestly think that is going to do? Welcome to more noise for the mods.

    Not a single one of those reports can possibly contain any comments from SO.com since I don’t even comment there, and my compromises with editing behavior and such seem to be ignored.

    The point stands Jeff, you had an axe to grind, and you abused your power. That is fine, just make sure you don’t go around proclaiming anything else. Tell the truth. I published the IRC logs, you have provided nothing.

  56. Rich B says:

    @toast: Considering I have ‘posted’ maybe half a dozen times in over a month anyway, you are just flat out telling stories.

    Find something better to do with your time than mislead people.

  57. Jeff Atwood says:

    > now that you have made a public offer to temporarily ban or permanently ban me anytime people make enough noise?

    Do you know how many other Stack Overflow users, in the entire history of SO, have generated anything even *remotely close* to as many support emails as you?

    Zero.

    I can’t think of even a single other user that has come up more than twice in email, much less 20-30 times.

  58. gamecat says:

    @Jeff Atwood & Rich B,

    sorry to interfere, but can we please keep up the professional level here. The emotions are getting the better part of you.

    Thanks

    GC

  59. Jeff Atwood says:

    Let me be clear:

    I think (and have always thought) Rich B generally does improve the quality of Stack Overflow. Therefore I *want* Rich B to come back. That is why it is a timed suspension and nothing permanent. This is of course, completely up to him.

    However, there cannot be any more of the following:

    * Other users react negatively to your posts, posting negative responses and generally causing a commotion.
    * There is a broad sense of community resentment over your behavior, and you are frequently cited in discussion about the community.
    * The moderators get regular email complaints about your behavior.
    * You make snide or rude comments “behind people’s backs”, in public places.

    I know, CRAZY TALK! But somehow, we have 50,000+ users that seem to abide by these guidelines just fine every single day.

  60. toast says:

    @Rich B – After reading the IRC logs, I see my opinion of you and the IRC channel was well justified. So just keep saying whatever you want, whining and bitching about life not being fair. I really don’t have to take you seriously anymore.

  61. Rich B says:

    @Jeff: When those emails do not pertain to behavior on the site your are moderating, they don’t matter. That is what the delete key is for after all.

  62. Rich B says:

    @Jeff: If you can cite these issues I have had on SO.com, I would be happy to be responsible for them. Anything that happens outside of SO is simply not SO.com’s problem. This is something you will have to accept as a moderator. I cannot help you there.

  63. gamecat says:

    I totally agree (and he is not the only one contributing to the site, but others are more low profile ;-) ).

    I still hopes this can be solved on a professional level. SO is just to valuable to be wasted by this mudfight.

    regards
    GC

  64. Clic Upvote says:

    @Rich B
    > @Jeff: When those emails do not pertain to behavior on the site your are moderating, they don’t matter. That is what the delete key is for after all.

    They do matter to SO, in every possible way, as the complaints come from SO users and the bad emotions *will* create resentment in SO as a result. In my opinion the rules Jeff has come up with for the penalty box are the absolutely justified.

    Also, I believe Jeff said that he has been getting complaints about your behavior on SO, not on any other sites.

    What makes you think you should receive such favoritism that all emails about you should be ignored and deleted? Hah.

  65. daok says:

    Should not be with email count you receive but with a feature under StackOverFlow to be able to flag a user with a reason.

    Email is a real joke, If I want Rich B to stay in the penalty box, I’ll create 50 emails of complain at team@stackoverflow.com from “fake” email… I think this idea might be good but it’s really not well implemented…

  66. TheTXI says:

    This is pretty absurd. This like suspending/expelling Johnny Smith for picking on Little Timmy away from school grounds during a Sunday morning.

    I am thoroughly amused at the complete avoidance over the topic of making #stackoverflow on IRC an OFFICIAL arm of the website itself, or making another one and serving it as the official one. Doing so would probably completely eliminate 99% of the “abusive speech” that goes on in the current official channel and will move it off to other avenues away from prying eyes.

    There are other IRC channels out there where a good number of us congregate and a lot of BS is tossed around in there, but I am not going to turn tail and cry and report that user for doing something in a completely open venue that has no rules.

    Make some rules for IRC, whether it’s in #stackoverflow or a new official channel. Simple as that.

    Until then, I don’t see what right the school principals have on punishing Johnny Smith for bloodying Little Timmy’s nose outside of school.

    Interestingly on point CAPTCHA – “ban something”

  67. Jeff Atwood says:

    > Make some rules for IRC, whether it’s in #stackoverflow or a new official channel. Simple as that.

    We already have a rule. It’s pretty simple, and 50,000+ other SO users manage to abide by it every day without a problem.

    Don’t Be a Jerk.

    If you want to be jerks on IRC, that’s your perogative. Just do it in private so I don’t get emails about all the stupid, offensive, rude things you say there. Problem solved!

  68. Frakkle says:

    I see SO is no longer a place for adults. I guess I’m out then. It was cool while it lasted.

  69. Razzie says:

    If on the StackOverflow blog, an IRC channel is mentioned as the SO community channel, whether it is unofficial or not, then you should behave at least a little bit professional in said channel. Impersonating Jeff in a negative way (or whatever community member), and rude language, is IMHO childish and far from professional. It wouldn’t be bad if it was done in a fun or humerous way – it was done in a negative way.

    That hurts the community. A community Rich B always claims to respect, but it doesn’t always show, to be honest.

    I think Jeff has the right to ‘protect’ the SO community like he does, even if not everybody agrees.

    Don’t take me wrong, this is nothing personal. I feel like Rich B has been good for the SO community (though I didn’t always agree with his stance on editing posts), but after reading the IRC logs, and taking the whole ‘edit war’ thing in account, the apparant 20-30ish complaint mails, I can certainly see the reason for the temporary ban. And I feel it would behoove you to be quiet for a moment and rethink your ‘actions’ (it’s a bold word, I know), rather then claim to be a victim and blame everybody but yourself.

    But oh well, that’s just me…

  70. toast says:

    @Frakkle – If you can’t handle your actions having consequences, then I guess SO isn’t the place for you.

  71. The Man Who Sold The World says:

    Jeff Atwood:

    They go in the penalty box for multiple infractions across *all* the criteria listed over a period of weeks or months. And this behavior persisted after multiple direct warnings via email.

    Compare this with…

    Jeff S, 08-11-2008, http://forums.thedailywtf.com/forums/p/9618/176692.aspx#176692 :

    topspin> First off, I think banning MPS is not appropriate. He should at least have been warned before all of this escalated.

    Jeff S> Just FYI — he was continually warned, and we tried 4-5 times to have a dialog with him, and each time his response was (sometimes literally, sometimes figuratively) “eat shit and die”.

    Some people just never learn.

  72. Frakkle says:

    @toast: I have taken no actions that would have consequences. I just think that this response is the worst possible outcome.

    The mods have stepped up to play nanny, and that’s fine for what (I guess) most people want the site to be. But I can’t see it turning into anything more than a “plzsendtehcodez” stockpile, and people writing (often bad) code for those people for free, with no explanation of it.

    And of course, none of those users will be banned or penalized, even though they’re being complete wastes of time and space. They will instead be reinforced in their behavior.

    I could be wrong, but I just don’t see it ending any other way. SO has been leaning towards that trend for awhile, with only a small group of people actualy concerned about it. But who knows, maybe “plzsendtehcodez.com” is the site everyone actually wants.

  73. Jeff Atwood says:

    > none of those users will be banned or penalized

    Well, except that the plzsendtehcodes types tend to get heavily downvoted. How is that reinforcement? You’re conflating two totally different things, here. The point you bring up is an interesting one, but I am struggling to see how it’s related to the timed suspension.

    What do you propose? That we should issue timed suspensions to users who have sufficiently downvoted questions or answers?

  74. TheTXI says:

    What Frakkle is getting at is that the entire uproar over Rich B started because of his hardline editing tactics and escalated from there with everyone jumping on the “hate Rich B” bandwagon because of it.

  75. toast says:

    @The Man With The Plan – Is Rich B on SO the same user as MasterPlanSoftware on TDWTF? Or is that an example of people being deliberately obtuse?

    @Frakkle – I was just paraphrasing a Rich B argument that would get pulled out whenever someone complained about his editing style.

  76. TheTXI says:

    @Toast: Yes, Rich B is MPS. I would like to announce for the record that I was known as TrueXtremeIcon on the albinoblacksheep.com forums several years ago in case anybody wishes to dig dirt up on me from there, since that is apparently fair game in determining consequences for users.

  77. Rich B says:

    @Jeff: I still have not received your email with the complaints against me that I may or confirm or deny.

    Surely you don’t plan to make this completely without appeal right?

    Looking forward to receiving my copy of the complaints.

  78. Rich B says:

    @TheTXI: Indeed I was, and that information is certainly no secret at all.

    However why that has anything at all to do with this is beyond me. I guess I expected a little more maturity and professionalism here.

    Maybe after I receive the copy of the complaints I can get a clearer picture here.

  79. brian b says:

    What’s funny about RichB is that he seems to actually *want* to be the bad guy here so he can complain and become some sort of free speech martyr.

  80. Frakkle says:

    @Jeff Atwood:

    My views on this are fairly simple. I value users based on their breadth of knowledge and desire to learn. In all seriousness, those of us in the programming profession tend towards being more cynical than others. But to get to my point, it is that you basically have (whether you want them or not) two minority factions on SO.

    First you have the vocal minority who wants the -content- of the site to be more strictly moderated. They do what they can to enforce this, and get a lot of negative retaliation to it.

    The second group is the vocal minority who essentially just wants a chat site and to buddy around. They are the kind who get genuinely offended when questions about wedding cake, etc, are closed. They want -behavior- to be more strictly moderated.

    These two factions can’t really co-exist in perfect harmony, per-say. My problem with your decision is that enforces the social aspect of the site, and is basically a slap in the face to people who care about content. There have been many comments made about needing to more strictly moderate content, and about users who are just abusing a site that is built on the foundation of programming Q&A to be a general chat forum, but no admins have stepped up to address that.

    Of course the final group is the general mass userbase, who doesn’t see this tiny war going on, doesn’t read the blog, doesn’t use uservoice, and is generally just there to use the site.

    I would prefer that more effort was placed on keeping the site clean of fluff, and more focused on being a useful resource to programmers. That would involve a penalty box or something for users who are using the site for non-programming related things. But I don’t see that happening. A decision has been made to make this a subjectively “social” site where everyone should just get along, and not an objectively “programming” site.

    For those reasons, I cannot see SO remaining a useful resource to me for very long. I don’t care about what jokes you can make on your wedding cake. Keep that to your personal blog or chats with your friends. I care about becoming a better programmer.

  81. toast says:

    There’s something to be said for patterns of behavior. To say that nothing from the past can be used to determine what happens today is just trying to dismiss any evidence showing you to be a douche.

    And how come I don’t find it surprising in the least that the most vocal Rich B supporters are also TDWTF forum members?

    Especially when the “past” is roughly 6 – 8 months prior.

  82. toast says:

    @Frakkle – It isn’t just two sides. There are some of us who would like to see less fluff, but aren’t exactly pleased with the way some of the editors have gone about this.

  83. Frakkle says:

    @toast: Perhaps so, but after spending a lot of time trying to filter the content, and being verbally abused for it, it should be no surprise to see an editor react. The conflict has simply escalated.

    One side just decided to report it as abuse to the administrators of the site first. It makes me wonder what would have happened if the admins started getting a bunch of emails in their inbox reporting every NPR question…

  84. Jon Cram says:

    I don’t understand the rabble-rabble over the possibility of being penalised in SO for behaviour outside of SO.

    Consider a small, real world community. If you’re banned from the pub for being a jerk and banned from the church for being a jerk, could you not be banned from the corner shop, without ever having set foot in there, simply because the proprietor doesn’t want to deal with a jerk?

    Whether or not behaviour outside SO is taken into consideration (I suspect it is not), I think Jeff would be right to ban from SO someone who had never set foot in SO if that person was known to be a jerk, so long as this is done for the benefit of the community.

    Why does this concept so enrage people? Consider a country’s penal system, where a person can be imprisoned (i.e. banned from the country) for certain inappropriate acts. This is something with which we are all familiar and yet not something over which people generally take offence.

  85. Click Upvote says:

    @Frakkle,

    Being a programming Q & A site doesn’t mean that every single question has to be about how to create protected class members in Java or something similar. This is what I would consider not programming related:

    - Questions about dating, personal life, etc
    - Fields other than programming such as medicine, accounting, etc.

    Other than these, if a question is related to programming, code, or development, even though it isn’t a tightly asked and narrow question, and it gets sufficient upvotes and community interest, what harm does it do to keep it open? That’s what I’ve been failing to understand.

  86. Rich B says:

    @Frakkle: Or every edit that is rolled back for no valid reason by someone who is not the OP. Kind of like the several people engaged in these comments that /have/ been reported for this behavior. Or the several accounts that have been made to directly impersonate me or other people. Or the people who actually /do/ leave offensive comments about users and get reported.

    But nope, I am the only one exhibiting some kind of negative behavior. Not on SO.com mind you, not like the other people who are actually abusing SO.com. No evidence at all of that.

    I wish I could live in the same fantasy world where I was causing an issue on SO.com, and no one else was.

    Unfortunately I am burdened by facts and truth and it is quite the opposite.

  87. toast says:

    Oh, you and your poor burden. It must weigh heavy on your poor, misunderstood soul.

    Who said you are the only one exhibiting negative behavior? No one. You have been the largest cause of negative behavior. Not the same thing. As an analogy, just because some people are chucking pebbles does not make it ok for you to throw bricks.

  88. Click Upvote says:

    @Rich B, this site isn’t your personal playground. If people don’t like you and Jeff receives 30 complaints about you, you get kicked out. Simple.

  89. Frakkle says:

    @Click Upvote: And that’s kind of my point with the two ideologies. I find it very annoying when the site is cluttered with what I would call meaningless fluff, as an example the “What joke should go on a wedding cake” question. There are a ton of these sort of questions, favorite X, worst Y, etc.

    They are bound to be ‘popular’ and upvoted, because people are using this more and more like just a social chat forum. And that line will continue to be blurred even more, now that this enforcement decision has been made.

    But even though the questions are ‘popular’ doesn’t mean they belong on the site. Soon (if not now), one could probably get away with “who has the best rack?” and link to a bunch of female celebrity pics, and it would be upvoted several times. That does not mean it belongs on the site though.

  90. Nicolai says:

    @Rich B: If there are so many other people causing issues on SO.com, why aren’t the administrators receiving a bunch of emails about them?

    Could it be because not that many users feel the same way as you do, after all?

  91. Rich B says:

    @Nicolai: They are receiving emails about them.

    Remember, the team is not receiving emails about my behavior on SO like those people anyway. Or at least not as far as they have demonstrated so far.

  92. Click Upvote says:

    @Frakkle,

    The question wasn’t “What joke should go on a wedding cake” , it was “What code should go on a wedding cake”, hence it was programming related as far as I’m concerned. (You can see that Jeff himself edited the post to add a cake with code to it).

    I understand that some people will consider such questions to be ‘fluff’, and that’s what the ignored tags feature is for. I don’t care about ASP or C# questions so I ignored those tags, and I don’t even notice those questions. That’s what you should do as well. You can’t change the opinion of the majority of users.

    And I’m positive that blatantly not programming related questions will never work on this site, simply because its filled with programmers who want to see programming related topics only. I will be one of the first people closing a question about best racks if it ever got opened.

  93. toast says:

    @Rich B – Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.

    Just because they refuse to disclose emails sent to them in private to you, does not mean they have not received them. Assume good faith here.

    It is this sort of attitude that people don’t like in you.

  94. TheTXI says:

    @Toast: You make the American justice system weep. How can someone defend themselves from accusations without access to the evidence? Unless this is Guantanamo and we are doing military tribunals and all of the evidence is “state secrets” or “confidential because of national security”

  95. Razzie says:

    @Frakkle

    To be fair, many, many non-programming related questions are closed. The vast majority. And I’m all for that, don’t misunderstand me (I don’t like questions like ‘how do you drink your coffee?’ either).

    But an occassional, fun, npr question doesn’t hurt with this site. There’s nothing wrong with a humorous touch once in a while.

  96. Frakkle says:

    @Razzie/ Click Upvote: I simply don’t think turning a blind eye to that misuse of the site is the answer. We aren’t going to agree on this point.

  97. toast says:

    This is not a democracy. This is not the American justice system. Jeff and the SO team are the final arbiters of what goes on at the site.

  98. Welbog says:

    @toast: and they’re doing a terrible job.

    They’re banning someone (albeit temporarily) without telling him why, without giving him the chance to defend his actions and ostensibly basing their reasoning entirely on hearsay.

    It seems that one could get ten e-mail addresses and e-mail the admins to report anyone. There seems to be no checks for the integrity and validity of the reports they receive, there’s no visibility into it whatsoever as demonstrated by the fact that we’re posting speculation after speculation in this thread.

    Yes, Jeff et al. have full control over whom they ban and why, but some of us expect them to do so in a reasonable manner, based on tried systems that work fantastically well in the real world.

    I’m terribly sorry that you simply accept authority when it imposes itself upon you but some of us have a stronger sense of justice.

  99. Clic Upvote says:

    @Frakkle, its because it isn’t a misuse of the site, its just something you don’t personally like.

  100. Darren Kopp says:

    leave rich b banned for 7 days, but give him the “high sticking” badge. win for both parties, and also epic.

  101. Ted says:

    @TheTXI “You make the American justice system weep”. – That is such a silly comment… Do you have any more clichés from 1980’s courtroom dramas? How about “You are making a mockery of the courtroom”. Throw that one into the mix….

  102. toast says:

    @Welbog – I would think that there would be some degree of fact checking before instituting the box. I trust Jeff and the SO team. I don’t “simply accept authority” imposed upon me, I accept the actions of people I respect.

    @Darren Kopp – The point is to discourage his behavior, not reward it.

  103. TheTXI says:

    @Ted: Give me a little while and I’ll refer to my old Perry Mason episodes. The point still stands. Jeff can run the website however he wants, fairly or unfairly. But for someone like toast to sit there and follow blindly the “benevolent leader” and believing that the accused do not have a right to counter evidence against them is just sad.

    I could easily pull out other examples of this same exact type of lazy thought, but then I would have Godwin called on me.

  104. toast says:

    Since I already know Rich B’s defense to the evidence, I’ll go ahead and just put it up here:

    “I don’t see any abuse. I’m just following the FAQ. You’re a liar and actively trying to destroy the site. I’m the only one maintaining site quality.”

    That about sums it up.

  105. Rich B says:

    @toast: Don’t put words in my mouth when I refuse to respond to your vitrol. I will respond on my own when I feel the need to.

    I have enough people putting words in my mouth and emailing them to the team apparently.

  106. toast says:

    And apparently trusting the actions of people who have been highly reputable and fair in the past is equitable with being a Nazi.

    For counterpoint: You don’t have a right to see evidence of why you’ve been fired. (Unless, of course, you have reason to believe you are being discriminated against based on the criteria set forth by the laws of the country you live in. However, in an at-will state, “being a jerk” is all the reason an employer needs, and they don’t have to have evidence. So I guess all employers are Nazis as well).

  107. toast says:

    @Rich B – You have said all of those things at one time or another in defense of your actions. And parody isn’t putting words in your mouth, it’s mocking you through satire.

  108. ColinYounger says:

    Godwin’s law lives!

  109. Code Slave says:

    Bravo Jeff!

    Even after tangling with Rich B, I’d like to see him come back – provided his attitude improves. Much of his work is good, he just seems to find a way to rub a lot of people the wrong way.

    But taking it away from Rich B, and general principals.

    There are complaints because Jeff et al are including actions contributions from the cloud of activity around SO (be it IRC, the blog, user voice, e-mail, etc.).
    The argument is made that this is like disciplining an employee for what happens outside of work or a student for what happens outside of school hours and off school grounds.

    In the real world, people do get disciplined for what they do out of work and students do get disciplined for what happens outside of school. Why? Because, their actions are having a negative affect on the employer or the school. If Bob is caught on 60 minutes kicking babies; his contract is terminated (maybe with severance, but probably not if they can find some form of cause). If Johnny Smith is picking on Little Timmy off school grounds to the extent that Timmy is terrified of coming to school then Johnny gets dealt with, especially if it is a continuation of a fight/bullying pattern in school.

    Is the cloud of negative activity having a negative impact on SO. I think it is. It has certainly limited my involvement; my rep has been pretty flat over the last month due to much reduced activity. As such it is reasonable for the owners to do what they can to control it. They can’t control what happens in the cloud, but they can control the site.

    Can penalised and deleted people create sleeper account, build them up, and then come back with their vinegar? Yup.
    Is it a pain in the butt for them to do that? Yup. But a least they have to contribute something to SO (get rep) before they can get to that point, and SO’s already got improved voting fraud detection – so their friends can’t help them either.

  110. TheTXI says:

    @Toast: I’m not calling you a Nazi. I’m calling you a lazy-thinking flunkie who will mindlessly follow with unquestioning loyalty someone you previously associate with being reputable and fair.

    You can provide plenty of examples where you don’t have the right to defend yourself from accusations/firings/etc. That doesn’t make it any less UNFAIR. Yeah the world is a very unfair place, but you just said that you find Jeff to be a very FAIR person, but you will mindlessly sit there and exalt and heap praise upon him right as he is in the middle of being UNFAIR.

    What’s to stop someone from sending numerous complaints to the team about you? If enough people get vocal about it, how do you know YOU won’t get the “jerk” label and pick up a 5 Minute Major?

  111. Rich B says:

    @CodeSlave: Could you please show an example of this ‘cloud of negativity’ on SO.com? I do not see it, especially as it pertains to me and anything I have done outside SO.com.

    I need to see some kind of example of this since the team seems to be reluctant to furnish the complaints so that I may look them over.

  112. Brian says:

    I remember hear this idea from Joel S. on a podcast.

    Why not delete people and not tell them? Setup the site so that they don’t realize they’ve been banned. Let them post answers, questions and comments. Of course, don’t actually show these things to other people. To the offender, they’ll see their activity but no one else will.

    To them it will seem like people are just ignoring them (they aren’t really, they are just not seeing the comments/questions/answers). The offender will end up leaving the site. If you want to reactive them then after a few months, stop ignoring their account.

  113. BradC says:

    FYI, there are almost **23,000** users with a reputation of exactly 1 on StackOverflow. (User page 838 of 1494 is where you start seeing users with more than 1 reputation. 35 users/page * 656 pages = 22960.)

    So this is hardly a “public” penalty box, unless the user comes on this talk page, and announces it themselves!

  114. toast says:

    @TheTXI – No, you implied I was thinking like a Nazi. Do you and Rich B honestly believe that if you don’t explicitly say something then it can’t be used against you?

    And what would be fair about letting Rich B seeing those emails (with names and addresses removed to protect them from retaliation of course)? Let’s go over a few scenarios:

    1. The sheer volume of emails about Rich B is the factor in his boxing.

    The content of the emails has no bearing on the quantity of such emails, and therefore Rich B doesn’t need to see them.

    2. There is a large amount of emails saying “Rich B is a jerk” with no supporting evidence.

    Here, we run across a your word against their word scenario and showing the content to Rich B is once again a moot point since he can just say here that he is not a jerk (which he has).

    3. These emails contain links to questions, snippets of IRC logs, etc that serve as evidence of Rich B’s behavior.

    The SO team has the database, they can look through everything. Questions, answers, comments, bios, etc. Not just for what is seen on the site, but what has been deleted or changed as well. In this, they are a better determinant of behavior than any of us, because we can remove comments where we may have misbehaved or been out of line. This skews the evidence.
    As for IRC logs, well Rich B himself has posted the logs to the SO channel, so we can consider that as his evidence and Rich can feel free to defend his actions there all he wants.

    And Jeff can fairly ban a person in an unfair manner. The fact that Jeff has the power is unfair because not everyone has it and he can apply whatever criteria he wants when using it. However, I feel that Jeff will be fair in judging the criteria used to apply that power.

    And go ahead and run an email campaign against me to get me boxed. Somehow, I don’t think it will work. Feel free to prove me wrong.

  115. Out Into Space says:

    Wow, I’ve never seen Jeff so worked up.

    As a somewhat heavy SO user (no pun intended), I decided to change my own usage habits in response to what the userbase seemed to want as a whole. It wasn’t hard.

  116. Adam Davis says:

    I’m sad that a good contributor to stack overflow must be penalized, but I don’t disagree with the punishment or the ruling. As SO becomes more widely used and known, it will attract more users who see no problem with their behavior.

    If I run a discussion group at a community center, and one of the members helps out quite a bit in that discussion group, but then outside the group is backbiting and negative regarding others in the discussion group (mentioning rape, death, racial slurs, and all manner of other _very_ offensive insults) then, for the good of the discussion group, I will kick them out. It is not always easy to see or make the connection to how it is damaging the group, but over time it becomes obvious. It’s better to catch it early before the damage is visible, though.

    Yes, analogies are poor – but humans are social creatures, and it’s going to be the case that negative attitudes spread outside the forum they are expressed in, and will affect other communities.

    I can’t tell you how many good communities have been ruined by one or two people who poison it – and not intentionally. They don’t believe their actions elsewhere have consequences. Eventually the bile left unchecked rises, overflows, and ends up significantly damaging and permanently changing the community.

    I’m glad the Jeff and Co. Are taking swift, decisive, and thoughtful action to prevent letting this change the essential nature of the community.

    Rich has been told repeatedly to cease certain activities that they find destructive to the community they are trying to foster.

    He has refused to change. End of story.

    The constant requests to face his accusers, see the emails, etc are nothing more than a tactic to pull others into his fight, draw it out, etc.

    He knows exactly what he is doing wrong, and willfully refuses to change.

    I’m quite certain the penalty will not change his behavior either, which will be a loss to the community, but that is, ultimately, up to Rich B.

    -Adam

    reCaptcha: Shadydale

    Indeed.

  117. Welbog says:

    @toast: if Jeff wants me to trust his judgement in this regard he’d damn well better supply the actual evidence in addition to the processes he follows to verify them. I’m not going to trust someone just because he founded a website.

    He could be being completely fair, or he could be throwing darts at ponies and basing his decisions on the sounds they make. The bottom line is I’m not going to trust someone who is not sharing important information with the community he’s trying to govern. That’s just not right.

  118. Rich B says:

    There is no reason to withhold the evidence of complaints if they are truly based in reality and the team was confident enough to ban a member over them.

  119. Code Slave says:

    Rich B,

    I don’t care to. Our benevolent dictators have made a decision. Who am I to question it (please don’t box me Jeff, I’ll be good :) ).

    You are under the mistaken belief that this is a democracy, fair and just. It’s not. The King (Jeff – all hail Jeff) takes the mode of the population, and after careful consideration and wise judgment, makes a decision.

    If the population doesn’t like the decisions of the King (gawd save the King), they revolt and either *chough* replace the king or form their own country. And sometimes dissenters go to prison or get executed/banished.

    Following those lines, I don’t think Jeff et al are going anywhere. Therefore, if you don’t like being boxed or banished; you’re welcome to start your own QA site. Make it the best darn QA site.

  120. Shog9 says:

    *sigh*

    Bad precedent, Jeff. I, and i suspect many of the rest of us, try to keep a professional and on-topic attitude when posting on SO… but off-site, all bets are off. I’m certainly not pulling punches on the CodeProject forums out of fear that it’ll reflect badly on SO.

    I appreciate that you found yourself in a bad situation, realized that if something wasn’t done it would only escalate, and decided to do… *something*. But if you’re gonna be up-front about it (posting on the official blog to announce it), then you gotta go all the way – you can’t just say, “We’re sending some users to Gitmo ’cause they deserve it (but can’t say why), we’ll let ‘em out when they get better (unless we kill them)”

    This is only gonna get worse unless you take a stand: sure, it’s Rich B generating the emails now… but who’s gonna be the lightening rod when he’s gone? What are you gonna do when, lesson learned from being too public, some users form a private, invite-only mailing list and deny its existence while using it to rule the site?

    I’ve been saying this since the beta, but you need a forum. An *official* forum. Where the rules are known, but aren’t as strict as SO proper. That way, you have some oversight when it comes to meta discussion. Blogs and tweets don’t cut it, and if you seriously try to use control over SO accounts as your Big Stick to Punish Evildoers on the Internet, it will end badly.

    Moderate your own site, be honest and open, and consider it a job well-done.

  121. Welbog says:

    @Code Slave:

    > You are under the mistaken belief that this is a democracy, fair and just. It’s not.

    This is not an argument: “It’s not fair and just it doesn’t have to be”. As if that someone justifies injustice? WTF?

    I don’t think anyone here is claiming Jeff doesn’t have the right to ban people. Of course he does. The point we’re trying to make is that’s not even remotely how it should be. There is no excuse for witholding information, denying defense and not outlining the processes followed. Of course he doesn’t *have* to do any of these things, but what kind of self-respecting person wouldn’t *expect* and *want* him to do them?

  122. Adam Davis says:

    RichB: “There is no reason to withhold the evidence of complaints if they are truly based in reality and the team was confident enough to ban a member over them.”

    Except that then every minor punishment becomes a huge workload of pushing and processing data to the accused.

    This is a cost in time that cannot be born.

    -Adam

  123. Rich B says:

    Hmmm, looks like the blog comments strip out anything that resembles a tag. Lovely.

    Lets try this:

    12:01:24 | toast| I have purposely been reporting RichB’s behavior in an
    attempt to get SO to be a community discussion site. RichB
    was my last great obstacle.
    12:01:38 -!- JoelAtwood is now known as JeffSpolsky
    12:01:45 | JeffSpolsky| Hear hear!
    12:02:01 -!- JeffSpolsky is now known as JonSkeet
    12:02:16 -!- JonSkeet is now known as stienman
    12:02:20 | stienman| Ok, I’m done now.
    12:02:21 | toast| I have never been able to find any evidence of any wrong
    doing on SO.com by RichB so I have taken to reporting
    everything he says on IRC.
    12:02:26 | Firas| Well
    12:02:37 | toast| Jeff Atwood is so stupid that he actually bought into it.
    12:02:38 | Firas| it makes sense… a jerk is always a jerk
    12:02:44 | Gortok| Jesus was a Jerk.
    12:02:52 | Gortok| He questioned the status quo.
    12:03:00 | Firas| Well he died for it didn’t he?
    12:03:00 | Gortok| Does that mean they were right to Crucify him?
    12:03:07 | toast| Man, I am so smart and everyone else is so stupid.

  124. Rich B says:

    @stienman: Not providing the evidence means there is no way to even know what I was actually banned for. It is awfully easy to make an IRC log look however you want it to.

  125. Clic Upvote says:

    @Rich b, you are sick, for actually taking the time to write all that. I think you have a psychological disorder and you really need some kind of psychiatric help (this has been my opinion about you from the beginning). I think for your own good you should be perm. banned so you’re forced to find some productive use of your time and your life

  126. toast says:

    The fact is that we know that Rich B’s behavior has generated a lot of mail in the team’s inbox. We know that opinion of Rich B is generally negative and that people find him abrasive.

    Instead of attacking the issue, Rich B’s behavior, you are going after incidentals. You are trying to throw the focus on the content of these emails (which I show is practically meaningless) rather than what they demonstrate, that Rich B is a “jerk”.

    Assume that the emails in question contain either StackOverflow links or snippets of IRC logs. Extrapolate from there. If you can 100% justify his behavior and attitude in those areas, then do so. You hardly need an email that says “Rich B is a jerk. http://stackoverflow.com/question/My-Closed-Question is where he is being a jerk” to refute. Just pull up all of his data through the site.

    Or hell, just go through the Great Edit Wars. There are several links there and the comments of that post itself.

  127. Rich B says:

    @Clic: It wasn’t too hard to copy and paste from the IRC channel even when I had to run a quick replace on ”, but thanks for your concern.

  128. toast says:

    @Rich B – I have never reported any member of StackOverflow to the team. The fact that you think that I have is funny. And the closest I’ve come to being in the channel is looking through the logs after you’ve been boxed.

    You seem to think I care about you more than I actually do.

  129. Rich B says:

    @toast: That log clearly has your name. Are you telling me that is not you?

    How can you prove this?

  130. John Saunders says:

    @Rich B: To the extent that SO will not send you the emails, perhaps some of those who wrote emails would consent to email you their concerns directly? That would give them the chance to rephrase what they said so that it is more appropriate for person-to-person communications.

    The emails were propbably sent in confidence; new emails to you would not be.

  131. Rich B says:

    @John: I don’t care one way or the other, but it should not take a lot of effort to dump 20-30 emails into a file and anonymize them quickly.

    I am being banned for IRC logs (of all things), I think I should be able to see the IRC logs I am being banned for. I am not asking for people’s names or email addresses or anything… I fail to see the issue.

  132. Adam Davis says:

    Matt: The blog is open for comments, although I wouldn’t be surprised if they required registered comments soon.

    In the interest of full disclosure, I made the comment for and in behalf of toast above, it was not Rich B or anyone else. You merely need to know one’s email address to get the icon to line up.

    Feel free to email me your displeasure, or impersonate me on this blog: adavis@ubasics.com

    -Adam

    reCaptcha: framers

    Indeed.

  133. Matt says:

    I feel Rich B is playing a dangerous game trying to negatively influence SO members with his public comments.

    If he feels he was unjustly punished, he should have dealt with SO team privately through emails or IM. This is all having a bad impact on SO.

  134. Rich B says:

    @Matt: I did attempt to deal with this privately. I was not the one who made it public. Jeff Atwood did.

  135. Matt says:

    @Rich B – then why bother? There are plenty of other forums elsewhere. As for the rest of the folks, the show goes on..

  136. Matt 2 says:

    @Rich B: I would not have known of your issues with Jeff had you not mentioned them first. All Jeff did was announce a penalty box. You were the one to state that it was “to deal with the huge problem of me” (April 6th, 2009 at 6:53 pm — I’m assuming PST).
    Unless you’re claiming that someone was impersonating you when that was said, you were the one to make the dispute public.

    The addition of a penalty box implies that there has been behavior that to site moderates is a problem. No one said to whom it was being applied.

  137. Matt 3 says:

    Totally agree to the comments from Matt and Matt 2. Now I see the whole thread. I really dont believe Jeff wanted to make this public.

  138. toast says:

    @Rich B – Still not boxed. Apparently when behavior falls far out of the norm, they consider that you are impersonating someone for ulterior motives.

    The proof that it isn’t me is in the fact that it sounds and acts nothing like me.

    Really, you are becoming a sick parody of yourself. Step back.

    @Adam – Thanks, now I have to use another email address so I can uniquely identify here.

  139. jlembke says:

    I felt a great disturbance in the force. Of millions cheering….

  140. Steven A. Lowe says:

    Thank you all for the most hilarious blog thread yet.

    @Rich B: you should definitely change back to the Jesus avatar, it goes well with your martyr complex ;-)

    @Jeff: penalty box – brilliant! Since martyrs crave attention, everyone wins…or do they?

  141. Jon Erickson says:

    It’s pretty obvious when people on here are on the extreme defense, Thank you Jeff & Co. for dealing with this issue and making SO a healthy community of non-trolls.

  142. Shog9 says:

    toast:
    > Instead of attacking the issue, Rich B’s behavior, you are going after incidentals.

    Rich B’s behavior is – believe it or not – a minor issue compared to that of the rules and protocols of the site as a whole. Rich invites a lot of flak, everyone knows that. But I don’t for a minute believe that if he disappeared tomorrow, things would be all doves and roses… someone else would be the new target, more so if they actually defended themselves. That’s the ONLY good reason for discussion here: are the actions fair, are they effective, and do they have a shot at actually working as we go forward?

    I don’t care about IRC. There are reasons why IRC remains a niche communication system, and the logs posted here illustrate it nicely. I DO care about SO. And right now, SO looks poised to make some of the same mistakes that have hurt sites like Everything2 and Wikipedia in the past: lack of transparency, capricious enforcement of vague rules, undue weight given to anonymous complaints…

    I don’t care about the number of private emails received by SO admins. I, and i’m sure some of you as well, have also been sent private emails from new users upset about one thing or another – when that happens, i step in and do what i can to correct the problem, if there is one, within the limits of what SO allows. What happens on SO is public record and fair game for discussion; what happens in private email conversations is not.

    I think the Penalty Box is a great idea. I’m not so happy about the way it’s being used. “Don’t be a jerk” is just the sort of vague guideline that looks good on a bumper sticker but doesn’t really fit in a rule book. If you’re gonna punish someone, then explain why – that way, i can avoid punishment by avoiding such behavior. But i can’t control emails others send about me, or defend myself from secret allegations. If those are the criteria, then the task of avoiding punishment – and ultimately, the punishment itself – is pointless.

  143. theman_on_vista says:

    @the last 100+ responses – yawn…

    @ jon ericson – your girlfriend is hott!

    @ jeff atwood – looking forward to next podcast!

  144. Chris says:

    I see a lot of people complaining about this being “unfair”. I hate to be the one to break it to you, but life isn’t fair. If someone has told you that it is, you have sadly been deceived.

    As the old saying goes, “You want fair? These parts, the fair don’t come round but once a year.”

  145. toast says:

    Rich B has been told many times that he was acting like a jerk, yet he took little to no steps to moderate his own behavior.

    Rich B is pretty much a WikiLawyer. He wants hard and fast rules so he can skirt the edge as close as possible without actually violating anything so he can claim innocence. With a more fluid system, he has to actually start playing nice or face the consequences.

    If you hadn’t noticed, Rich B and his group like to debate semantics and what was explicitly said, believing that they can’t be held accountable for what they imply. If you have to constantly defend your actions to the community at large in a community driven site, you have to start considering whether or not you are the problem.

    The problem here is one of behavior, not of emails.

  146. TheTXI says:

    For a site that professes “don’t be a jerk” and tries to be community moderated in the hopes that it is the most overall fair method, it’s pretty funny how many people can chip in on the comments and go “Hyuk Hyuk! Life ain’t fair! Hyuk Hyuk!”

    I have a feeling they wouldn’t be warbling the same tune if it was them being categorically labeled a jerk and under suspension without the ability to defend themselves or appeal.

  147. Click Upvote says:

    Clearly everyone is happy to see Rich B go. SO is already much better, no edit wars taking place. Please perm-ban Rich b or at least ban for a month.

  148. belgariontheking says:

    @Downvote the retard: clearly we have a different definition of “everyone.”

  149. coleman says:

    I hope this wont affect jerks that all closing questions programming questions as “not programming related” and only people that are mad about it.

  150. toast says:

    @TheTXI – Yes, when the person who constantly claims that he is not being disruptive, that he is not the problem, that if he was the problem the admins would let know, blah blah blah gets the proverbial smack down, I laugh. It’s funny.

    @BTK – Everyone not from TDWTF, yes.

  151. Frakkle says:

    @shog9: I agree wholeheartedly with your statements.

    The application of rules are apparently subject to the “squeaky wheel gets the grease” method. While this is -a- method of handling things, it is a very poor one for internet communities.

  152. Juan Manuel says:

    @Click: I’m not happy… I actually pretty much agreed with him about the direction of SO (I didn’t really pay attention to his ways, so I don’t comment on that)

    I’d hate to see SO become a discussion forum, as it will be I think: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/725676/what-forums-did-you-use-before-stackoverflow

  153. Shog9 says:

    toast:
    > If you have to constantly defend your actions to the
    > community at large in a community driven site, you
    > have to start considering whether or not you are the
    > problem.

    No one *has* to defend themselves. I can and do edit questions on SO, leave my reasoning in a comment, and never return to argue the point. Rich sticks around and argues, and i suspect *that* is why he generates so much controversy.

    But this isn’t about Rich B, as much as you or Rich would like it to be. I highly doubt that the SO team implemented a feature like this to punish a single user.

    So what tune will you be singing when it’s you in the box?

  154. Rich B says:

    @Shog9: Just for the record, I don’t actually argue or comment at all anymore. I stopped commenting completely about edits after the team emailed me about complaints.

    My activity history will show that.

  155. toast says:

    There seems to be a group of people who seem to believe that it is only the number of complaints against Rich B that have caused him to get boxed.

    In the post and multiple times through the comments, Jeff has said that it is a multiple of factors that determined the outcome, that Rich B had been warned multiple times about his behavior and he still persisted.

    Trying to make this seem like an arbitrary decision based on a sheer count is dishonest.

    Plus, let’s weigh in the fact that this is not the first time that Rich has been so disruptive to a community that the site owner has seen fit to reduce his presence. There is a common element among the communities Rich B has been kicked out of, and it isn’t jackboots.

  156. jalf says:

    @Rich B: I haven’t followed your posts on SO very closely, and I’ve never visited the IRC channel. And even I am getting tired of your persistent whining. Never-ending edit wars on SO, and never-ending crusades on IRC or this blog to boost your ego do not contribute anything to SO.

    Yes, we get it, you think it’s unfair. Yes, we get it, you wanted to be a moderator. Yes, we get it, you want SO to be your personal playground.

    It isn’t.

    What you don’t seem to understand is that SO is not about you as a person. It is not about *anyone* as a person. That’s why I contribute. There are plenty of communities where people can pat each others on the back and socialize and try to jockey for power/reputation/moderator status. I don’t need SO for that. SO is simply about providing helpful bits of knowledge to those who need it.

    “You are under the mistaken belief that this is a democracy, fair and just.”
    No, you are under the mistaken belief that it is anything more than a glorified Q&A site. It isn’t. It is not a democracy any more than it is a dictatorship. It is a collection of individuals contributing to a common goal.

    I don’t *care* about democracy in this context. I don’t need to be heard. I don’t care if it is a dictatorship. Neither Jeff nor you can tell me what to do. I don’t care about rebellions or rights or anything else.
    I just enjoy answering people’s programming questions, and I appreciate having a forum in which to ask questions myself.

    The mistaken beliefs are all yours. The belief that there is a fight to be fought. The belief that there is some kind of “government” to rebel against. The beliefs that you are being persecuted. The belief that anyone *cares* about egos and clashes of personality.

    There are plenty of places on the internet for all that.
    SO is not one of them. It is not about democracy or freedom of speech or justice, it is simply about asking and answering questions related to programming.

    Get over it. Behave as an adult.

    Now can we move on? This still isn’t RichBOverflow.com.

  157. TheTXI says:

    @Shog9: Although I agree with you on almost every point, the “guidelines” that they put up on the blog post appear to be perfectly cast against the controversy surrounding only a single user.

    I don’t see any attempts or mention at “boxing” users who have obviously trolled the website before like ClickUpvote, SOTroll, So Sucks, themanon_vista, etc. etc. The only person getting the spotlight turned on him is Rich.

  158. Chris says:

    @TheTXI:”For a site that professes “don’t be a jerk” and tries to be community moderated in the hopes that it is the most overall fair method,”

    You expect community moderation to produce the fairest result? Community moderation is one of the least fair systems around. Community driven sites are notoriously unfair. SO isn’t fair. Wikipedia isn’t fair. Neither are digg, reddit, or Slashdot. Systems like these are inconsistent, faddish, and prone to cliques and bullying. Jeff’s individual decision to ban someone is far more likely to be fair than group moderation on a social site.

    These sites don’t use community moderation because it’s fair. They use it because it scales with the userbase and does a reasonably good job of filtering massive amounts of content. It doesn’t matter too much if individual decisions are unfair as long as the aggregate result is pretty good.

  159. Rich B says:

    @jalf: I started reading your post, but when you started quoting other people and replying as if it was me, I stopped.

    None of your points seem to have any relation to me or my activity on SO. Perhaps you /should/ go look at my activity on SO.

  160. toast says:

    @shog9 – Hypothetically, if I was in the box, I’d probably wait out my week and be done with it. Because I would have also received messages telling me to cool it well before that action.

    I certainly wouldn’t wail and gnash my teeth complaining about the utter unfairness of the poor, defenseless soul that is being stomped upon by the merciless Nazis who run the site. And I certainly wouldn’t get my channel buddies to rally around me in defense of my jackass attitude.

    I could do something pointless like ask Jeff to box me during the same period as Rich B to prove that I wouldn’t do these things. But you and I know that such a display would be pointless because it would be an elected condition and I would refrain from saying anything just to prove it. So I guess, you will just have to take me at my word.

  161. Rich B says:

    @TheTXI: Indeed and the emails I received the same night from the team included much of the blog post almost verbatim.

  162. Chris says:

    @Rich B: “Surely you don’t plan to make this completely without appeal right?”

    Jeff runs the site, he’s the one who makes the decision to ban someone, so who exactly do you want to appeal to? Joel? Joel seems to be content to offer advice while essentially letting Jeff do whatever he wants with the site. He let Jeff built this site on an untested technology, without a schedule, or a proper spec, do you really think he’s going to step in and overrule Jeff because of this?

  163. Rich B says:

    @Chris: This is community site and a community issue.

  164. TheTXI says:

    Just because the \top guy\ issues a directive doesn’t mean you can’t appeal back to the same guy. It works that way in sports leagues where you appeal rulings made by the commissioner to the commissioner himself. Oftentimes nothing comes of it, but the fact that you have the ability to present your own case and hope to sway opinion is still important, no matter how futile it is.

  165. toast says:

    @Rich B – Also, it’s not completely without appeal. You have appealed multiple times in this thread alone. Still boxed. Just because you appeal, doesn’t mean you get your way.

    Anyway, it’s a mechanism of the site. If you don’t like the site mechanisms, then maybe this place isn’t for you. Right?

  166. Chris says:

    @RichB: SO is a community driven site, but it is not a community run site. The buck stops with Jeff and Joel. They could have set up a nonprofit with a community selected board like the Wikimedia foundation or some open source projects, but they didn’t. SO is a business, not a democracy.

  167. TheTXI says:

    @ClickUpvote:

    Going and using the opportunity presented by Rich’s suspension to run willy-nilly around trying to rollback his edits on posts you have no standing in is a good bit of evidence of trolling (and that is only recent).

    Examples:
    http://stackoverflow.com/revisions/700344/list
    http://stackoverflow.com/revisions/700375/list

    This is not at all the first time either, just the most recent examples.

  168. toast says:

    Not to mention that enough of the community complained to the team that the team felt they had to do something about it.

    So, in a way, this is a result of a community decision. The fact that it is not a decision you and your small group like or approve of does not make it less of one.

    Also, choose a side. Either this is a community driven site in which the community decides what happens, or a specific subject site in which the FAQ is the final arbiter of the rules.

  169. TheTXI says:

    Oh, and here are some more:

    http://stackoverflow.com/revisions/690626/list
    http://stackoverflow.com/revisions/172186/list

    Fixed at the moment:
    http://stackoverflow.com/revisions/692566/list

  170. TheTXI says:

    @Toast: You are assuming it has to be one way or the other, instead of a community driven site that is supposed to self-police itself based on an original set of rules (or in this case the FAQ).

  171. toast says:

    @TheTXI – I see no abuse. Show me proof of abuse.

  172. Chris says:

    @TXI: What does that second one have to do with RichB? All that’s there is the OP and one edit, neither of which was done by Rich.

  173. TheTXI says:

    Looks like I copied one of them that was not ClickUpvote. Sorry about that.

  174. Rich B says:

    @Chris: That is because the team deleted his revisions.

    See the full conversation here:
    http://pastebin.com/m12660e8f

  175. Click Upvote says:

    Those edits were rollbacked because Rich B sees it his responsibility to remove smileys, hello/thanks, and change wording of posts from what the OP intended to be in there. If its an SO policy to not allow greetings or smileys in a post, let me see the URL where this policy is listed and I’ll refrain from rolling back edits like these in future.

  176. Paolo Bergantino says:

    Wow! Bravo, Jeff. I was wondering when something was going to be done about this, and I think the steps you are taking are tough ones to make but the right ones.

  177. Rich B says:

    If any of those links don’t have Click Upvote in them it was because the team deleted his revision. That is mentioned in the email conversation I posted.

    Clearly if the mods were required to delete the revision, there was abuse going on.

  178. mmyers says:

    @Click Upvote:

    Rolling back other people’s posts that have been cleaned up:
    http://stackoverflow.com/revisions/714349/list
    http://stackoverflow.com/revisions/718709/list
    http://stackoverflow.com/revisions/700205/list
    http://stackoverflow.com/revisions/715472/list
    http://stackoverflow.com/revisions/721604/list

    Persistently re-adding an unrelated tag:
    http://stackoverflow.com/revisions/408929/list

  179. TheTXI says:

    @ClickUpvote:

    Another two instances of your blatant trolling…

    http://stackoverflow.com/revisions/686228/list
    http://stackoverflow.com/revisions/686341/list

  180. Razzie says:

    I also see only one of them where I think Click Upvote had absolutely no reason to rollback to a previous revision.

    Not that it really matters. I’m sure that he would eventually had recieved a warning about it (if he didn’t already) and if he would continue, would be boxed.

    That’s apparantly how SO works. I’m somehow quite sure though that if it was Click Upvote instead of Rich B that was boxed right now, this topic hadn’t had this much of a discussion :)

  181. Click Upvote says:

    @Rich, as I understand it, anyone with over 10k rep can delete edits, so I’m not sure if it was the site deleting my edits or one of your buddies.

    I rollback the edits where only the OP’s wording is changed, and only to fit your personal standard of what should be in a post, not to remove punctuation/grammatical errors. I don’t see that as trolling, I see trying to enforce your own standards over everyone as trolling.

    I haven’t been told my the team or anyone that I’ve broken any rules, I suspect that if the ‘team’ deleted my edits I should’ve gotten an email.

  182. Rich B says:

    @Click Upvote: You can see the email conversation with team@stackoverflow.com just like anyone else can.

    Your abuse has been well documented.

  183. Click Upvote says:

    @Txi, those edits are taken out of context. The question was asking what code to put on a wedding cake, and putting that line in there would’ve made it amusing. When the edit was changed I didn’t roll it back, so its hardly ‘trolling’.

  184. Rich B says:

    @Click Upvote: The one I posted here:
    http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2009/04/a-day-in-the-penalty-box/#comment-18741

  185. TheTXI says:

    I would definitely consider going into numerous answers and inserting references to sex as trolling. Whether or not you kept up with it is irrelevant. You didn’t do anything to make the answer better (arguably you made them all worse).

  186. Click Upvote says:

    @TXI, that’s subjective and depends on the sense of humor of the person viewing it. Its a community driven site and you are allowed to change answers where you think it will improve them. People didn’t think it will improve the answer, so when they removed it, I didn’t try to roll it back.

    That’s unlike Rich B with whom, if his edits are removed, he continues to roll them back just for the sake of it.

  187. Rich B says:

    @Click Upvote: There is a difference. I don’t rollback edits that an OP rolls back, and I don’t insert controversial subject matter.

    My edits are solid and do not get deleted by the team.

    You keep talking about roll back wars/abuse, but I don’t see you providing the documentation of abuse that other people are providing about you.

  188. toast says:

    @Rich B – How is a pastebin proof of anything? How do we know that you didn’t forge that bit of evidence like you did with you IRC log of me colluding with Jeff and Joel to get you banned?

    I’m sorry your past behavior reflects poorly on your current motives, but you should have thought of that before you became a flaming jackass.

  189. Click Upvote says:

    @Rich B, don’t you? I believe you were the subject of the following post:
    http://blog.stackoverflow.com/2009/03/the-great-edit-wars/

    If I have changed any edits that were rolled back by the OP, i sincerely apologize to whoever the OP was for that, it was definitely accidental.

    I roll back your edits where all you do is change the wording of the OP to fit an unknown standard. I see that as disrespectful to the OP, as if they’re not ‘good enough’ and you have to modify their question. It can really be argued whether that is pointless, or changing the wording of a post to remove hello/thanks, or smileys, is pointless.

  190. toast says:

    I think The Great Edit Wars is the closest thing Jeff has come to an “official policy” as anything. Also, there are some questions tagged “sofaq” (or is it “so-faq”) that have answers from the team as well. Extrapolate from there.

  191. Click Upvote says:

    @Rich B, that may well just be because you were complaining to Jeff and he wants to keep the community, as a whole, happy. The fact that i didn’t receive any email from him (although we had been communicating earlier about another topic, actually, you and your friend BTK) means that this is no confirmation.

    Also, its in no way common sense to edit a person’s post and remove smileys/thank yous.

  192. George says:

    @toast: Didn’t you say earlier that we didn’t need proof of Rich B’s transgressions? So why would we need proof that it was you that did that stuff before we punished you?

    @Click Upvote: From a third-party’s perspective, it appears that you rollback RichB’s edits simply because you have some sort of beef with Rich B. Having inspected your fights with him, his edits were justified. Fighting a supposed battle on behalf of the OP is just cloaking your disdain for him. Let’s call it what it is.

    There is a policy on edits. And if we weren’t allowed to edit cruft out of the OPs edit, then there wouldn’t be editing allowed, period.

    I’ve emailed Jeff and team about your behavior, and I’ve already spoken on this blog about the sheer arbitrary nature of this entire proceeding. I’ve also emailed Jeff about the same. Whether sanity returns, I don’t know; but when you’ve burned Rich B at the stake, where are you going to turn next?

  193. belgariontheking says:

    Did anyone forget the FAQ?

    If you are not comfortable with the idea of your questions and answers being edited by other trusted users, this may not be the site for you.

    Learn it. Live it. Don’t bitch about the ENTIRE purpose of the site: an editable wiki.

  194. Razzie says:

    Though I didn’t necessarily agree with Rich B’s edits, it *does* take two for an edit war. So I’m sure others were just as guilty there. Let’s not start this discussion again…

  195. Rich B says:

    @Click Upvote: You roll back valid edits to posts and the team deletes your revisions.

    I don’t care how you justify or frame this, you are a detriment to the community and you are abusing your edit rights.

  196. Click Upvote says:

    It annoys me when Rich b edits a question just to change the wording of an OP’s question, I’ve never denied that. If there’s an official policy that says I’m not allowed to do this, or if Jeff tells me to stop doing it, I will. Until then, its not justified calling me a troll on the basis of that alone.

  197. Click Upvote says:

    Lets wait until we hear Jeff’s official take on this, Rich B. I haven’t yet been told by him I’ve done anything wrong, so I’m hardly ‘a detriment to the community and abusing my edit rights.’ If I’m told not to rollback your edits anymore, I will. Simple.

  198. Rich B says:

    @Click Upvote: I don’t need to wait for his take on this, the email was from him and his team. Surely they would step in if I was misquoting them.

  199. toast says:

    @Gortek – First of all, I’m not sure what you are trying to argue there.

    I didn’t say there didn’t need to be proof of Rich’s transgressions, just that having Rich physically look over the emails in question was pointless for reasons I outlined.

    So calling into question the veracity of Rich B’s proof of anything when I don’t trust Rich B is perfectly valid and not contradictory. Especially when he is willing to be dishonest and disruptive to prove a point.

    And who’s to say sanity hasn’t already returned? A lot of us feel that Rich B has caused a bit too much chaos. Face it, this is just a decision that you don’t like. You were willing to hide behind rules and FAQs and Jeff’s lassiez faire involvement when it suited your aims, but refuse to sit down and accept the same when used against what you want.

    @BTK – I thought the purpose of the site was to be the anti-ExpertsExchange where developers can share knowledge. Everything implemented on the site is to further that goal

  200. Chris says:

    @RichB: “Surely they would step in if I was misquoting them.”

    Do you actually think Jeff is sitting there hitting refresh every minute to read this thread? Frankly, my guess is he found something better to do around 6 hours ago. The fact that he hasn’t said anything about what you posted means nothing.

    In any case, if Jeff as something to say about ClickUpvote’s behavior, I’m sure Jeff can send an e-mail himself (as he did several times with you).

  201. Shog9 says:

    toast:
    > Hypothetically, if I was in the box, I’d probably
    > wait out my week and be done with it. Because I would
    > have also received messages telling me to cool it
    > well before that action.

    Hypothetically, you would also have disagreed with the admins’ rational so strongly that you would have continued in the behavior that prompted warnings in the first place. Because otherwise, you wouldn’t be in the box, right?

    And that’s completely appropriate. I don’t have one problem with box/probation strategies for managing rebel users.

    So long as their behavior on the site actually warrants it.

    But that’s what concerns me here. I have a hard time believing that Rich’s behavior on SO is what led to this – looking back over his activity log, i see a bunch of very useful edits and a handful of edit wars with Click Upvote. If the former resulted in boxing, then something is horribly wrong; if the latter, then surely CU should be boxed as well?

    But – and i keep coming back to this, because it’s what really worries me about all this – but if the SO boxing is a result of behavior off-site, then none of us are safe. Me or you. I don’t want to be in the position where i need to censor myself or use alternate pseudonyms on other sites just to protect my SO account, nor do i want to defend my actions in other forums to anyone not affiliated with those forums. That goes against everything i hope for in SO, destroying the very concept of the SO meritocracy.

    I don’t care if you disagree with me, or CU, or Rich, or anyone else on SO, so long as you can maintain a modicum of civility and back up your arguments. But if discussion fades to dirty politics and ad hominem attacks, culminating in one party running crying to momma about the mean ol’ bully… we’ve lost all hope. I’m sure Jeff has the best of intentions here, but he can’t police the Internet and shouldn’t try – if he can manage to effectively moderate SO itself, that will be impressive enough of an achievement.

  202. Antony Trupe says:

    Just lost a fan.

  203. Rich B says:

    @Chris: This conversation is all being reported to the official IRC channel where Geoff Dalgas and others are. So yes, if I was making up emails, I expect the team would say something.

    A great man once said “Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence”. Right?

  204. toast says:

    @Rich B – I asked how could I know that you didn’t concoct that email as you did with those IRC logs. You could have first said, “And you can check with Geoff who is currently in the IRC channel.” instead of just saying that they would deny it if it were false.

    Also, I’ve noticed (by way of links in The Great Edit Wars) that they’ve deleted some of your revisions as well.

    “I don’t care how you justify or frame this, you are a detriment to the community and you are abusing your edit rights.” Right?

  205. Chris says:

    Orin Kerr, over at The Volokh Conspiracy just posted an entry that seems very appropriate to this discussion.

    http://volokh.com/posts/1237333836.shtml

    One of the commenters over there said:
    “As should be clear to most commenters by now, the surest way to get banned is, after being warned, to quarrel with the warning, accuse the blogger of improper motives, whine about unequal standards, and generally try to turn the discussion towards the subject of banning. If you get warned and don’t think you deserved to, just accept the fact that you’re playing in someone else’s sandbox, say you’re sorry, and/or let it go.”

  206. is it soup yet? says:

    Can someone post a program? It’s really hard to tell the players without one. :-)

  207. Jin says:

    Thanks for the usenet nastalgia!

  208. TheTXI says:

    @is it soup yet:

    Here you go:

    The Bad Guy
    Played By: Rich B

    The Secretly Gay Submissive Lovers of the Bad Guy
    Played By: Anybody who chooses to defend him or critique Jeff’s actions/policies.

    The Heroes
    Played By: Everyone else on here whining about Rich B all over again, as well as those high-fiving each other over Jeff being super duper awesome in taking Rich B down a peg or two.

  209. toast says:

    Way to crank the whine to 11.

  210. Rich B says:

    http://stackoverflow.com/revisions/700344/list

  211. toast says:

    So, let it be. By retaliating with rollbacks of your own, you are no better. Jon Skeet made the only useful edits to that page.

  212. belgariontheking says:

    @toast: noone asked you, really

  213. toast says:

    Maybe they should.

  214. Paolo Bergantino says:

    @TheTXI: Yikes. Got the victim complex down to a T.

  215. David Schmitt says:

    Re: http://stackoverflow.com/revisions/700344/list

    Jon’s (and now Eddie’s) edit are valid edits, “respecting the original author”. Both improving the original text, without destroying its character. I’d be proud to be edited thusly.

    recaptcha: “can enjoyed”

  216. toast says:

    @David – If we’re going to be pedantic isn’t resume supposed to have accents on both e’s? ;)

  217. Click Upvote says:

    ‘Improving the text’ is subjective. IMO they only take away the personality of the OP. There is no other difference between the original text and the edited text.

  218. Devin Jeanpierre says:

    The most significant difference is that it reads better. Clarity of content is more important than character of content– this isn’t a social networking site, this is a Q&A site.

  219. Click Upvote says:

    I disagree, It reads exactly the same as before. No difference whatsoever other than meeting an elitist standard.

  220. Rich B says:

    @Upvote: I have to ask, who are you trying to ‘help’ here? What is your stake in that rolling back grammar changes to that post?

  221. David Schmitt says:

    Looking at the recent flurry of activity on said question, I guess there are a few others who have earned a day or two in The Box. Independent of content.

  222. Rich B says:

    @David: I agree. Click Upvote’s rampage of rolling back needs to be stopped.

  223. cletus says:

    Wow, I always thought I had RichB’s number but not to this extent.

    What’s sad is that Jeff tried to make it not about a particular user (when it now clearly is) but was forced (by the user) to reveal all. And has since seemingly (understadnably) thrown his hands in the air and walked away from this “discussion”.

    CAPTCHA: Opular Gilmore

  224. David Schmitt says:

    @Rich: Thanks for vindicating Jeff in public by displaying obvious bias for one side of a lose-lose situation.

    The difference between Samuel, yourself and the rest of the world in one sentence: “Very well, I’ll stop. – Click Upvote (4 mins ago)”

  225. Click Upvote says:

    I’ve stopped editing that question as there are good improvements made to it recently which make sense, and not just Rich B’s elitist updates of only changes to the wording, with no improvement to the grammar etc of the question.

    But don’t worry Rich B, if you continue making elitist updates to enforce your standards while not improving the question, I’ll roll them back each time I see them.

  226. Rich B says:

    @David: I didn’t see anyone but upvote rolling back. The rest of them were trying to make other progressive edits to reach a solution.

    This is the expected behavior.

    And also, I do not need to be unbiased. I am always biased towards the edit that makes the post the best, not with people who cannot handle the wiki aspect of the site and roll back anything they see.

  227. Rich B says:

    @btk: Not to mention, it takes two to rollback war. I am almost always the first to make the edit, so the person who rolls back is the one to actually ‘initiate’ the rollback war.

    Somehow that escapes attention.

    What also escapes attention is the fact that I changed my behavior after that and talking with Jeff about it. I no longer roll back, instead I report the abuse like I do with upvote here. I also no longer comment on the site to make sure my fan club cannot accuse me of making ‘rude’ comments.

    There are people not changing their actions and continuing abuse, but I can assure you (and prove) it is not me.

  228. Eddie says:

    The word “elitist” is being thrown around a lot, and I have to wonder. I truly don’t understand why a 3rd party would ever, ever be offended or outraged at improving the grammar of someone’s post. I can understand the OP being upset or outraged, whether or not it’s appropriate, but a 3rd party? I don’t get it. And calling it “elitist” — as if it’s an ivory tower thing to improve grammar **ON A WIKI** — seems to truly miss the point. Remember, questions are here not ONLY for the OP, but also for the benefit of the rest of us long after the OP is happy with the solution.

    When I edit for grammar, which I do a *lot* of, I strive to maintain the OP’s voice, whenever possible, but in standard English grammar. Why do I bother? I used to work (grad student, really) at a physics lab where, not surprisingly, there were people from all over the world and who spoke varying degrees of English. On a regular basis, I saw people whose only common language was broken English struggle to communicate.

    And then they would apologize to *me* for their poor English! Hey, each and everyone one of those foreigners spoke more languages than I did, and I let them know that they should be *proud* of their English, and that it was improving, and that they had nothing to apologize to *anyone* for. I’m proud that I know a little Spanish and a little Polish, but each of these foreigners knew way more English than I knew of their language.

    Posts written in standard English grammar (pick your favorite, British or US or Canadian, whatever) are easier for native speakers to read. But even more so, they are easier for non-native speakers to read. A native speaker of English may call me “elitist,” but someone who is learning English may otherwise be unable to parse what another native (or especially non-native) speaker is saying. Call me elitist? I’m trying to make questions accessible to a wider collection of people. Seems the very opposite of Elitist to me, but OK. Opinions will vary. Whatever.

    I’m a bit appalled at the “blood-thirst” of some posting here, the unmitigated glee that one person has been spanked, and calling for more. The very fact that so many are calling for more is what tells me that this was probably a bad decision. Sorry, Jeff, I understand that you’re trying to solve a very difficult conflict, that you have been forced into the middle of this mess, that you feel that you *have* to do something, but I respectfully feel that this solution has created a bigger mess than it has solved. I hope I am wrong.

    @Razzie: “but you’d think that your average programmer is considerably more mature than your average Counter-Strike player.”

    Really? How many programmers have you known? (grin) There’s a small but VERY VOCAL minority of programmers who are considerably *less* mature than your average Counter-Strike player. MOST programmers are mature, but that minority really stands out. Have you ever read the Linux Kernel Mailing List? Very smart people, some unparalleled programmers, a small number of *very* immature individuals among them.

    @Shog9 and @Ólafur Waage and Frakkle: I agree with everything you have said.

    I find a lot of the glee at RichB being spanked falls into the category of “I hate it when things are unfair toward me, but I love it when things are unfair toward another,” which I find disappointing. This double standard is endemic and is part of human nature, I know. Just look at politics, anywhere.

    This is just the beginning of the larger struggle for the community to try to decide what belongs and what doesn’t belong. With the path things are on right now, I see SO becoming a slashdot for programmers within the next six to twelve months: A place where people are primarily rewarded for being funny, much less so for being insightful, and where technical content is a minority. The increasing mass of non-technical questions is up against the minority who seems to understand the value of a *technical* forum that has a tiny minority of “funny” stuff.

    And maybe the community at large will decide that this is what SO Should Be: A slashdot for programmers where the fastest way to gain moderation rights is to post fluff. If that’s the case, I’ll be gone because SO will no longer be valuable to me. I know that some responding to this blog post will be glad to hear that.

    I understood that SPAM was bad when I received a couple SPAM a month, because I understood how it would scale. Fluff posts here are the same. I see the technical content of this site being inevitably crowded out by fluff. We already have FaceBook and slashdot and the daily WTF and many other social sites that I have either never visited or haven’t visited in years. Why do we need yet another social forum, when there are so very few TECHNICAL forums like this one was (as I understand it) created to be?

    I am not defending RichB. He is an adult. He can defend himself, or not. But ultimately, this conflict is part of the larger struggle that SO finds itself in over what content is allowed. And as I said, the blood lust roused in the Anti-RichB crowd in the posts here has me convinced that the solution chosen is ultimately a counter-productive one.

  229. George S says:

    Here’s a timeline, for those of you keeping score:

    Rich B Makes edits.

    Part of community doesn’t like his edits/commenting.

    Users vociferously attack his edits (and only his edits, even though there are other users making the exact same edits he is, to include the site owner!)

    Users complain about Rich B. Rich B and high-rep users engage in a Open/Close War against those that don’t agree with Rich B (It’s unclear who fired the first shot, as for the Edit Cabal, it was business as usual).

    Jeff Gets Emails. Asks Rich B not to comment. Rich B curtails commenting on SO, as well as his editing.

    Edit wars (mostly) stop, except for a few users (Click Upvote, Sasha, et. al.) that want to go behind Rich B and revert his edits (supposedly on ‘behalf’ of the OP. How kind.).

    Rich B and other members of the Edit Cabal openly discuss editing and SO related items on a channel called #stackoverflow on Freenode IRC. At this point, this channel is not registered, but it houses at least one member of the SO team who could have registered it at any point (SuperDalgas). Edit Cabal pimps the channel location so that other members of SO can join; ostensibly to reach consensus, so that anyone with glaring issues can bring them to IRC and not SO proper (since Edit wars are generally frowned upon).

    A few people take the Edit cabal up on their offer (yet, seemingly none of the problem users that dislike Rich B, though some may have).

    Jeff Atwood gets complaints that Rich B is saying unkind things in IRC.

    Jeff Atwood apparently (and I say apparently because as far as I can figure, Rich B has done nothing on Stack Overflow or Uservoice that could warrant this) institutes a boxing of Rich B for his behavior on IRC, on an unregistered, unofficial channel.

    SuperDalgas registers #stackoverflow today on FreeNode’s IRC.

  230. Click Upvote says:

    I have no time to argue about pointless things belgarion and rich b. This is my question, answer it or I’m out of here:

    > Explain to me in clear words how i’ve ‘abused the site’.

  231. Rich B says:

    @upvote: Unfortunately for your argument, toast made a reference to that without backing it up with any fact. This is a common pattern for him.

  232. GregD says:

    RichB, Click Upvote, Toast, et al., can’t we all just agree to leave this in the past? RichB is in the penalty box now and has a chance to rectify his behavior. I say we just let it go…

  233. Click Upvote says:

    @Rich b, or you’re thick and you don’t want to check the post for where that link was mentioned about your edit wars. That, and/or you’re lying.

    @George/Gortok, read Adam davis’s excellent original reply here. Rich B used rape, death, and racial slurs directed towards other SO members. He is very lucky he still has even a chance to come to the site.

  234. Click Upvote says:

    @GregD, good point. And I’ll leave this discussion with that.

  235. Rich B says:

    @Gortok: For the record and the sake of full disclosure, no one /asked/ me to stop commenting. They asked me to be more careful as to not hurt the feelings of our thinner skinned members.

    It was my decision to stop commenting altogether to just eliminate the conflict. Apparently that just made them seek me out in new mediums. Oh well.

  236. Rich B says:

    @Click: You made the accusation, you have the burden of proof. I backed up everything I said about you.

    It doesn’t concern me if you cannot back your claims up, I already know that to be true.

  237. Jeff Atwood says:

    > if the SO boxing is a result of behavior off-site, then none of us are safe

    As I’ve said multiple times, it’s a broad spectrum of behaviors. Was offensive off-site behavior a factor? Yes. Was it the only reason? Absolutely not, there’s a persistent pattern of behavior across the reasons I listed that we are addressing. Not sure why you’re fixating on this.

    > As should be clear to most commenters by now, the surest way to get banned is, after being warned, to quarrel with the warning, accuse the blogger of improper motives, whine about unequal standards, and generally try to turn the discussion towards the subject of banning. If you get warned and don’t think you deserved to, just accept the fact that you’re playing in someone else’s sandbox, say you’re sorry, and/or let it go.

    Well said.

    If only more people would actually follow this advice.

  238. Rich B says:

    @Jeff: I still have not received the list of complaints including (as you say) abusive actions take both on and off SO.com.

  239. sth says:

    @Click
    > I rollback the edits where only the OP’s wording is changed, and only to fit your personal standard of what should be in a post, not to remove punctuation/grammatical errors.

    So in the already posted http://stackoverflow.com/revisions/700375/list I didn’t remove enough errors or what? The revisions are deleted, but I remember you rolled my edit back to the original. That there are in fact missing revisions can be easily seen: the question shows Rich B as the last editor while the revision log doesn’t contain any edits by him (he reverted your rollback).

    > I see trying to enforce your own standards over everyone as trolling.

    Then stop doing it.

  240. Jeff Atwood says:

    Rich, you’ve gotten 10+ emails from us in the last month. Post the full text of those emails here yourself if you feel so strongly about public disclosure.

    I’m not comfortable doing that on your behalf, but if you want to, that’s fine.

  241. Rich B says:

    @Jeff: I have posted all the relevant ones to people who have asked, nothing at all to hide.

    I certainly do not have the 30+ that you say you banned me for.

    When will I get a copy of those?

  242. Jeff Atwood says:

    Those emails from us to you contained specifics about the complaints. As I said, I am extremely uncomfortable posting private correspondence in a public forum.

    I guess you don’t want to make them public because then you couldn’t claim that we haven’t provided evidence of the behaviorial problems?

  243. Rich B says:

    @Jeff: I see no reason you couldn’t make a dump of the complaint emails without the senders in them and email them to me.

    I think that is a fair and simple request, not sure why you would keep trying to make it into something it isn’t.

  244. Shog9 says:

    Atwood:
    > Not sure why you’re fixating on this.

    I’m concerned about it because it potentially changes the game. Of course what i write on SO should have repercussions on SO – that’s a no-brainer. External behavior is not; yes, there may well be words or actions outside of SO by a SO user that reflect badly on the site and thus demand an on-site response… but that should be an exceptional and well-documented even should it occur.

    Throughout this discussion, i’ve had in mind a specific occurrence on Everything2 from a few years back. It culminated with the banning of a specific user, and the permanent deletion of a large portion of his contributions to the site. The end result was that – regardless of how much this user’s actions deserved such a response – there remained little or no record of them to serve as a warning to others, or to explain why such a seemingly-valuable member was brutally cut.

    SO should not have this problem; you’ve long preached the value of keeping a history even in the case of superficial deletion. So long as each change to a user’s status can be derived, publicly, from the history of that user’s actions, we’ll each be able to view it and to make up our own minds as to whether the change was warranted or not. But lacking a clear audit trail, we’ve nothing to go on but your reassurance that secret information was sufficient to justify public action. That may be a good way to run a business or start a war, but it’s a terrible way to run a community.

    That quote… from the Volokh Conspiracy… That’s a perfect strategy for avoiding trouble when posting blog comments. It’s also why i generally don’t post comments on most of the blogs i read – you’re at the mercy of the blog owner, who with a click can remove any dissent from the public record. Unlike many bloggers, you’ve generally been good about hosting and even responding to comments that disagree with what you write, something i respect greatly. But SO isn’t a blog, and those writing questions aren’t allowed to rule over the responses with the same iron fist so often found elsewhere… IMHO that’s a huge motivator, knowing that i can put the time in to produce a quality answer or edit without being silenced by someone who doesn’t agree with my view of the world.

    Please, stay true to the tenants of transparency and egalitarian participation that SO was founded under. Don’t turn SO into The SOosphere…

  245. Chris says:

    @Rich: Stripping the headers off is hardly enough to anonymize e-mails like this, particularly when they are closely linked to a site with public history like Stack Overflow. Remember when AOL released ‘anonymized’ search query data a couple of years ago? Researchers were able to go through the searches and figure out who a lot of the people were pretty easily. Similarly, when Netflix released ‘anonymized’ movie rental data, researchers were able to link the anonymous accounts with IMDB users without too much trouble. That same research team has recently done the same thing with social network data. Effective anonymization is really hard. There’s really no way he could send you the complaints without revealing who made them, headers or no.

  246. Rich B says:

    @Chris: He has revealed that information before. I know for instance GregD reported comments I made on IRC. No big deal, I stand by the fact that the unofficial SO had no moderation or rules and should have had no effect on my status.

    I am interested in the actual complaints though. I at least should have the right to make sure they are truthful. I am especially interested to see if there are actual SO.com abuses about me still being reported as I feel I worked with Jeff already to curb those. I have not received any real complaints about SO behavior since then, but now Jeff seems to be implying there have been reports.

    I am banned from SO anyway. Without their email address, what possible damage could I cause?

  247. Chris says:

    @RichB: There’s enough info on SO to identify quite a few users in the real world: full names, links to personal websites, questions that reveal their place of employment or open source projects they contribute to, etc.

  248. Oscar Reyes says:

    I guess this pretty much finish Rich B’s aspirations to be a SO moderator :-)

    @Rich B: I think you have done a great job at SO editing and correcting a lot of post. I don’t think there is none like you in that field.

    You have committed some mistakes in the process ( even if you don’t know which ones they were, or you don’t think you did, or don’t recognized them as mistakes )

    Please don’t replay with: “Tell me what I did wrong and I’ll show you ….” , no, no, no stop there for a minute. Keep your hands off the keyboard for a couple of minutes, breath in…. relax…

    … Ask your self: What could have I done wrong … today, not in your life, not in the last moth , not yesterday but today.

    Did you understand what other are trying to tell you? Don’t think on how are they wrong, or what arguments do you have on your side. Just think and try to see how others see you/read you.

    You don’t have to bee agree with them, you don’t have to think like them, they are probably wrong, but just try to think *Why are they saying those things, what in the world could have make to think like that*

    This way you will understand more about the people you interact with, you’ll be capable to listen them and understand them. Not to agree with them, but to have better understanding of you environment and how does it affect you.

    When you can successfully understand the reasons other people have ( even when you don’t agree with them ) then it would be easier for you to get what you want ( whatever it is ) because you’ll manage to fit into a community, either online, at work, with your family, friends.

    We are after all social animals.

    If you admire someone, look how does he behave, what kind of answers he gives, what’s that something that make you admire him/her.

    If you aspire to do something within a community you have to learn to “understand” a community, otherwise you will be an “hermit” ( is that the word? )

    I think you have a lot of energy and intelligence to share with the people around you. You just need more patience.

    Don’t go into the DARK SIDE OF THE FORCE.

    Use the source Rich, Use the sooooooourceeeee……