Challenges in Restructuring Community-Based Moderation

dc.contributor.authorTran, Chau
dc.contributor.authorTake, Kejsi
dc.contributor.authorChampion, Kaylea
dc.contributor.authorHill, Benjamin Mako
dc.contributor.authorGreenstadt, Rachel
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-12T19:20:04Z
dc.date.available2026-03-12T19:20:04Z
dc.date.issued2024-11-08
dc.description.abstractContent moderation practices and technologies need to change over time as requirements and community expectations shift. However, attempts to restructure the existing moderation practices can be difficult, especially for platforms that rely on their communities to moderate, because changes can transform the workflow and workload, participants' reward systems. By examining the extensive archival discussions around a prepublication moderation technology on Wikipedia named Flagged Revisions, complemented by seven semi-structured interviews, we identify various challenges in restructuring community-based moderation practices. Thus, we find that while a new system might sound good in theory and perform well in terms of quantitative metrics, it may conflict with existing social norms. Furthermore, our findings underscore how the relationship between platforms and self-governed communities can hinder the ability to assess the performance of any new system and introduce considerable costs related to maintaining, overhauling, or scrapping any piece of infrastructure.
dc.identifierDOI: 10.1145/3686954
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1773/55352
dc.titleChallenges in Restructuring Community-Based Moderation
dc.typeArticle

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