I am pleased to announce that Stack Overflow just added another team member in an officially paid capacity: Geoff Dalgas.

Geoff and I met on a customer site in 1996. Here was this crazy kid, in charge of all the computer stuff at a government facility, who knew more about the computers and custom software we were installing than we did! He was incredibly enthusiastic, heck, maybe a little too enthusiastic. I recognized a kindred spirit — another budding programmer who loved to code — and I urged the powers that be to offer him a job. He accepted, and I worked with Mr. Dalgas for the next three years in the best and worst (OK, usually the worst) of conditions. Sorry pal.
It was a riot building a tiny but crack coding team with Geoff, and I’m incredibly fortunate he’s available and willing to go down that route with me again on Stack Overflow. Geoff knows me very well by now. His original email response to me?
… other than that I am here, ready, and willing to be used and abused.
I say let the abuse commence in full. He’s used to it, since we used to write all our code in Visual Basic anyway.
Geoff joins Stack Overflow Valued Associate #00002, Jarrod Dixon. Some complained that the pictures we use to introduce our Valued Stack Overflow Associates, which were taken on our trip last year to meet Fog Creek in NYC, are too geeky. Too geeky? What the hell does that mean? Here on the Stack Overflow team, we embrace and relish our geekiness as a badge of honor.
As I’ve mentioned before, our goal is for Stack Overflow to be a modest but self-sustaining business. Something that provides a living for a few of your fellow programmers while hopefully, in some small way, improving the world just a little. Bringing Geoff on as Stack Overflow Valued Associate #00003, there to work daily on the site alongside Jarrod and myself, is another important milestone toward this goal.
I hope you’ll agree that we have tasteful and relatively unobtrusive advertising to subsidize and underwrite the development of Stack Overflow and now Server Fault as well. Our team now consists of three programmers (well, two good programmers, once you exclude me) and that means the pace of work on the site can accelerate even further. We will continue to satisfy top rated UserVoice requests, of course, but now we can work on larger features that may expand the scope of the sites. Who knows? Maybe there’s a third site out there waiting to be launched.
(also, not to be be crass, but if you’re interested in advertising on Stack Overflow, or Server Fault, do drop us an email. Help feed your fellow programmers!)
I never thought I’d have the great privilege of hand-picking highly talented fellow programmers from previous jobs — who also happen to be my good friends — to work with me on a project. And not just any project, but one that involves the entire programming community. Stack Overflow is something we can all contribute to together, a site that helps lots of programmers become better at what they do, if only a little bit.
I’ve always loved my job, because I love programming. Every day we realize this is a dream job, we love the hell out of it, and we’ll happily do it as long as we can — alongside the rest of our fellow programmers.
I say, let your geek flag fly!
Today’s update completes another top-rated UserVoice request — making it easier to explicitly link duplicate questions together.
There are lots of small improvements that go with this build. We now show the current close vote count in the close menu, so you have some idea why the other 3k+ rep users think this question should be closed:

Remember, it takes 5 close votes from 3,000+ reputation users to close a question, but they don’t all have to agree on the reason. (The reason with the most votes, however, will be shown when the question is finally closed. Yes yes, I know, you’re programmers so you are immediately wondering what happens if all five votes are for five different reasons. Stop that right now!)
If you select “exact duplicate” as a reason, you’ll get a dynamic as-you-type question duplicate lookup. You can match on any word in the title, or the actual question id number here.

If the question reaches the 5 vote close threshold, and has enough duplicate votes, it will be closed with the reason of “exact duplicate”, as before. But now a revision will be automatically edited into the post, summarizing the voted duplicate questions at the top:

We tried to look at the existing way the community was dealing with duplicate questions and streamline it into as few steps as possible.
Remember, in some cases we may want duplicate questions to stick around …
There’s often benefit to having multiple subtle variants of a question around, as people tend to ask and search using completely different words, and the better our coverage, the better odds our fellow programmers can find the answer they’re looking for.
… but if not, feel free to flag for moderator attention any closed duplicates you think should be merged. If the moderator agrees, he or she can merge the duplicates together without any loss of answers or comments.
The Stack Overflow moderator election is now complete.
There were two users who clearly ran away from the pack in the voting: Marc Gravell and Bill the Lizard. Between the two of them, they accounted for almost a third of all the 2,880 votes cast.
It was a tough choice determining such a close race — so we didn’t! Both Bill and Marc are new Stack Overflow moderators. I’ve posted some moderation guidelines and flipped the switch on their accounts.
As for Server Fault, that was tougher, because the community is just starting out. None of the existing Stack Overflow team is really qualified to moderate a site intended for system administrators and IT professionals.
So we reached out to two members of the existing community who very generously volunteered their time to moderate: Kara Marfia and Denny Cherry.
Eventually, once the Server Fault community matures, I expect to hold a moderator election there as well to bring another one or two online.
(One thing we haven’t addressed is how long a community moderator should be “elected” for; it seems like a good idea to hold periodic elections and let other trusted members of the community both relieve the existing moderators, and bring a fresh perspective to the mix.)
At any rate, congratulations to Marc, Bill, Kara, and Denny. As always, please use your new powers for good and not evil! Unless someone really, really deserves it.
Since we’re about to add community moderators on both Stack Overflow and Server Fault, I need to document what it is, exactly, we expect moderators to do.
The short answer is, as little as possible!
We intended Stack Overflow and Server Fault to be mostly self-regulating, and by that I mean we amortize the overall moderation cost of the system across thousands of teeny-tiny slices of effort contributed by regular, everyday users.
That’s why, in the faq, we’ve always said that Stack Overflow is designed to be run by the community:
Stack Overflow is run by you! If you want to help us run Stack Overflow, you’ll need reputation first. Reputation is a (very) rough measurement of how much the Stack Overflow community trusts you. Reputation is never given, it is earned by convincing other Stack Overflow users that you know what you’re talking about.
Specifically:
- Users with 15 rep can flag posts.
- Users with 500 rep can retag questions.
- Users with 2,000 rep can edit any question or answer in the system.
- Users with 3,000 rep can cast close and open votes.
- Users with 10,000 rep can cast delete and undelete votes, and have access to a moderation dashboard.
That’s the short answer. But the longer answer is that even with active community self-regulation, moderators occasionally need to intervene. Moderators are human exception handlers, there to deal with those (hopefully rare) exceptional conditions that should not normally happen, but when they do, they can bring your entire program to a screaming halt, if you don’t have proper exception handling in place.
Probably the most common thing I do as a moderator is deal with posts that are flagged — as spam, offensive, or for general “needs moderator attention” with a comment. That moderator flag count shows up in the topbar for every moderator.

If you see anything in the system that is evil (spam/offensive), weird, or in any way exceptional and deserving of moderator attention for any reason… flag it! That’s the primary job of a moderator: to look at every flagged post and deal with them on a regular basis.
Moderators do have some special abilities; these abilities are necessary to handle those rare exceptional conditions that can’t effectively be dealt with by the community.
- Moderator votes are binding. Any place we have voting (close, open, delete, undelete, offensive, etc), that vote will reach the threshold and take effect immediately if a single moderator casts a vote.
- Moderators can lock posts. Locked posts cannot be voted on or changed in any way.
- Moderators can see all data in the system, including votes and user profile information.
- Moderators can place users in timed suspension, and delete users if necessary.
- Moderators can perform large-scale maintenance actions like merge questions and batch retag.
So in summary, if you are a moderator on Stack Overflow or Server Fault, here’s what we expect:
- As a moderator, your actions now represent our website; please act accordingly. You are in a position of the highest trust, literally equivalent to the same access the development team has to the system.
- Your goal is to guide the community with gentle — but firm — intervention. Respect your fellow community members at all times; demonstrate fairness and impartiality in your actions.
- Keep the discussion reasonably on topic by closing and removing off-topic posts.
- Regularly check for and deal with flagged posts.
- In the case of serious disputes, communicate directly with users via email to help mediate and resolve those disputes.
A lot of the moderation work is extremely mundane, almost janitorial work. It’s deleting obvious spam, closing blatantly off-topic questions, and culling some of the worst rated posts in various dimensions.
As I said at the top, the ideal moderator does as little as possible. But those little actions may be powerful and highly concentrated. Judiciously limiting your use of moderator powers to selectively prune and guide the community — now that’s the true art of moderation.
The Server Fault private beta is going well; it looks like the Server Fault public beta will begin May 25th.
It’s been challenging to find the right community for Server Fault, which is intended for IT professionals and System Administrators. Launching Stack Overflow, a site for programmers, was much easier in comparison, because Joel Spolsky and I are highly attuned to the programming community. Building the right community is important, because good answers (and good questions) depend on the quality of the community that forms around the site. That’s not to say I have been disappointed with our “I wear both programmer and sysadmin hats” crossover community; my questions on Server Fault have gotten excellent answers!
But we can do better. I am making some tentative efforts to reach out to the sysadmin and IT pro communities. For example, I recently recorded a RunAs Radio podcast with Richard Campbell and Greg Hughes.
Richard and Greg talk to Jeff Atwood of Stack Overflow fame about being a developer who also maintains infrastructure. Jeff also talks about his new site, Server Fault, which is a Question and Answer site for the IT Professional. Great discussions about adventures in RAID controllers and NIC drivers and how FireBug can diagnose your network problems.
You can listen to the podcast in mp3 or wma formats. I try to explain why I’m excited about the Server Fault community for completely selfish reasons — I have just as many sysadmin and server questions as programming questions!
I was encouraged to see that we are attracting some fairly heavyweight members of the sysadmin community; Thomas A. Limoncelli is a Server Fault user, and he’s the author of several notable system administration books including this most excellent compilation of April Fools’ Day RFCs.
Tom (justly) noted our ignorance of the sysadmin community, and pointed out a few sites that Server Fault should probably be partnering with in some way, such as www.sage.org and www.lopsa.org.
I need your help in building the Server Fault community, not because I’m a shameless self-promoter, but because I am a crappy sysadmin! Yes, yes, I’m a crappy programmer, too, but at least I have enough programming ability to know how much I suck at programming. I can’t say that about being a sysadmin.
As of right now, I am removing the restriction that Server Fault OpenIDs must be in a permit list. You’ll still need the site level password …
alt.sysadmin.recovery
… but anyone who has a valid OpenID, and knows the above password, can participate in the Server Fault beta now.
Do you know of any notable sysadmin or IT professional communities? Please help us spread the word, as appropriate.




