The steady stream of people who are telling me that the Santa moderation bot is going to delete anyone who’s downvoted or disagrees with the group, is continuing unabated.

Here’s an olive branch: You’ve got a point. It’s just a black box and I juggle the parameters to some secret process to ban the people who got some downvotes, I can understand how that comes across as toxic. I might or might not be lying about taking careful time to look over its judgements and make sure that I think the impact is more positive than negative, but at the end of the day, it doesn’t matter. You still have to trust my intentions and trust the bot to make good decisions, and trusting that to an automated system rarely works out well.

To me, delegating the moderation of the community to the segment of that community that’s trusted and consistently upvoted by the rest of us is better than giving it to a handful of people who wield unilateral power according to random rules. I like the bot’s judgements most of the time when I look at them. The question is simply whether this algorithm is actually doing that delegation effectively, or if it’s just banhammering anyone who gets a couple of downvotes. I’m confident that it’s doing the first thing almost all of the time.

In talks behind the scenes with other moderators, I’ve been going into a lot of detail about specific users and going back and forth about judgements. I also do a ton of checking behind the scenes. I don’t want to do that publicly. I think it would be deeply informative to post a list of the “top ten” and “bottom ten” users, and go into detail about why the low-ranked users got where they are, but that’s probably not a good idea.

What I would like to do is share that information on some level, so that people can see what’s going on, instead of it being me relaying that everything’s good. It’s tough because I can’t break down every level of detail without invading all kinds of people’s privacy. That said, I do think that there’s a way to be found to open up the process so people can see and give input to what’s going on.

One happy medium I could do would be to have the bot post its spot-check automatically about once a week. It could pick out one random user who’s barely on the borderline, and post a couple of the worst comments they made. Usually, when I’m messing around with its parameters, that’s what I am trying to do. There are some comments that are clearly toxicity that have no business anywhere. There are some comments that are clearly free speech, and even if they’re getting downvotes, they deserve to be heard. Then there are some comments that are on the borderline between. My goal is to set up the parameters so that the borderline rank value for a ban matches up with the users who are on that borderline.

I can see some upsides and downsides to posting that publicly. What do people think, though? What would you want to see, in order to make an informed decision about what you think of this whole approach?

  • auk@slrpnk.netOPM
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    2 days ago

    What about this?

    I see what you’re saying. The line graph feels kind of paternalistic. It’s saying that if you disagree with the herd, you’re going to lose your value. I think the spectral timeline with a legend may be better, at least for a frequent posting and followup use case.

    The line graph is clearly better suited for discussing how the system functions though. For example, it appears a new member won’t get banned for a few negative interactions early in their career, as the cutoff is below zero.

    Yes. We give some leeway so that someone doesn’t get penalized for a single random downvote early in their career, but we still need to be reactive enough that if someone makes a new account and posts a garbage comment, we jump on it. I have a process that’s meant to deal with that, but it’s tricky. I’m still working it out, and I rolled it out a little bit early so that it’s now jumping the gun and deleting some comments from people who really shouldn’t have their comments deleted.

    It’s tough because it’s hard to test in the abstract, and by definition, the people who don’t comment a lot don’t leave too many comments to be able to use as test cases. What I’m planning to do is work on it a little bit more, testing in production, and once it’s worked out, I’ll make a post explaining it all.

    • Five@slrpnk.net
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      2 days ago

      I gotta say, you’re really good at making visualizations. I like this one best, but even the ones I liked less were extremely informative and readable.