Sometimes I wonder if that part of the forum is not more of just a way to ask why people get moderated and get an answer than a way to contest in a constructive and contributive fashion a moderation decision that you disagree with (in the hope to learn from it for the future, whatever the final decision is). That way, it sometimes just looks like a way for the moderation to legitimize themselves more than an actual way to have a constructive discussion.
When people try to accuse us of having certain motivations behind our moderation decisions, you're not stepping up to the plate in good faith, and you're forcing us into a catch-22. Either we ignore the bait and get yelled at for not answering, or we explain that no, in fact, we didn't just mod someone because they're a goon, we modded them because they broke a rule (if you want to get technical, using Katrina's provided definition of scrublord, we actually modded a goon for bashing goons among others), and get yelled at because you don't like our answer.
When a constructive response is given to a question in this forum, the response is almost NEVER "oh, okay, I won't do that again, thanks". It's almost always "RAWR RAWR RAWR HISS SPIT RAGE MODS SUCK". If you think we're going to tolerate that in response to every single moderation action taken, you are sorely mistaken.
The smallest criticism we do almost always causes drama and outrage from the mod team itself.
This works
exactly the same in the opposite direction: The smallest amount of moderation, however valid and in line with the policies stated in the FAQ and Rules, always results in drama and outrage from a certain subset of posters. Funny enough, it also works that way ingame; apparently threatening to ban - or actually banning - someone who's effectively dodging a ban is bad moderation, who knew?
For the record: dodging a ban or mute by using an alt is an instant permaban from both channels, according to Graelyn. I suggest not testing the ingame mods on that.
Likewise, in case it needs to be made clear: multiple accounts on Backstage will not allow you to avoid moderation by posting with another account. While we understand people might want to have a couple different posting identities for various reasons, which is perfectly acceptable, when it comes to moderation, we're going to ignore your account names and go by the user behind those accounts.
That aside, personally I fail to see how using some bits and bobs of a language ( especially since it is essentially a mixup of finnish and japanese or asian elements ) counts as "trying to play asians" and, furthermore, "failing at it.".
That's another matter.
No, it's not. It's exactly why his post was moderated, as Desi and orange have both noted. I understand and sympathize with Dav's sentiment, but it is still not an appropriate way to express that sentiment, and it was moderated as a result.
Furthermore, your insinuations that reports don't make it to the moderation team are utterly ridiculous. There are only two reasons your report wouldn't make it to us:
You didn't hit the submit button, or
you didn't report the post at all.
I will repeat:
just because reporting a post does not result in moderator action being taken does not mean that the report didn't make it to us, or that we ignored the report. The report made it to our forum, and we saw it, and subsequently decided not to take action.
We are not going to act on every report.
We do perform some level of report triage, and decide which ones need to wait for more input (which can consist of additional reports, input from moderators or both), and which ones can or need to be dealt with immediately. In some cases, if we're getting a bunch of reports for different posts in one thread, we may wait for a while to deal with them all at once.
People who demonstrate a history and habit of rule-breaking that merits moderation get more attention than others. They may get moderated for smaller infractions compared to others because they have already had it made clear to them multiple times where the line is.
People who are given a formal warning, and told to review the rules and FAQ, who then almost immediately go and post something else that merits moderation, are more likely to get moderated for smaller infractions than others because they were just warned, and clearly did not follow the instructions given to them in their warning. (If you're warned, you are not only told to re-read the rules and FAQ, you are also clearly instructed to
contact a moderator if you have questions, and not necessarily the one that sent the warning. Warnings are never sent without checking with other moderators first. If you get warned,
every moderator will know about it.)
In short, the number and severity of infractions determine how long your rope will be. YDIW is low on the 'severity' scale, but doing it repeatedly will put you in the mods' crosshairs. Reposting after a post was moderated, without changing what got it moderated in the first place, or posting links to porn, or things of that nature, will put you in the mods' crosshairs on the very first incident, and will typically result in a warning straight away.
And yes, moderation is subjective. We're not going to agree with you on everything you report. We're not going to agree with you on everything you don't report, either. Doesn't mean you're doing it wrong: it means we disagree. Nothing more, nothing less. (If you're using the report tool wrong, and it's bothering us, you will find out because we will tell you, or make a post reminding people to use it properly.)