Discussion Groups: Advice on successful moderation
As your discussion community grows, it becomes increasingly likely that you will find a small number of disruptive users. Whether out of malice, boredom, or greed, somebody will try to abuse your discussion system. As soon as you delete their posts, they will immediately appear under another name complaining about censorship and prattling about their First Amendment right to advertise sex aids and talk about politics on your software discussion board. Inevitably, this will bring in a chorus of naïve but well-meaning users quoting Voltaire who didn't see the porn ad that got deleted, but they sure know they are against censorship.
You may find this whole thing to be fun, or you may just find it a boring distraction from real work. If left unchecked, any public discussion group will rapidly accumulate a significant amount of spam and "noise." The noise itself will drive away the best users and the signal to noise ratio will worsen. As Clay Shirky, a researcher at New York University, writes, "A group is its own worst enemy."
To address these issues:
- Moderate your discussion group regularly.
- Don't delete things merely because you disagree with them; reserve the delete button for things which are really off topic or abusive. Although FogBugz tries to prevent people from finding out that their posts were deleted so they won't launch into a full-scale attack, a small percentage of your visitors will have access to the discussion group from different IP addresses, so they will discover that their posts are being deleted and become even more disruptive.
- Help train FogBugz AutoSort whenever possible. It's always better if a post is deleted instantly by FogBugz AutoSort before anyone sees it, because it reduces the number of people who even notice that moderation is taking place and launch into predictable rants about censorship.
- Train FogBugz AutoSort to delete any posts that are about deleted posts, censorship, etc. They are off topic and sure to stir people up, and if you don't do this, you'll keep repeating the conversation about censorship every three weeks as new users join in, which will eventually bore the old users, driving the good users away from the discussion group and attracting the bad ones.
To learn more, read Building Communities with Software by FogBugz designer Joel Spolsky.