I finally caught up with this thread. I was away last weekend, which happened to be rather bad timing in regards to my ability to follow the developing controversy, but on the other hand, there is a certain advantage to being able to read the discussion without participating in it.
I want to first mention (at the risk of reopening a wound) the whole deal with Wings of Dawn. I'll naturally start off by being defensive: I, personally, was intrigued when Wings of Dawn came out, and although I didn't have much interest in playing it, I appreciated the effort put into it and the fact that it was a giant TC made basically single-handedly. So I took the lead on approving the Wings of Dawn forum and unleashing Spoon on his own board with moderator privileges and my compliments (and an internal board cheekily called Wings of Derp). And now for the concession: Apparently, Spoon had his hands full moderating Wings of Dawn for quite some time and without staff support, but I was completely unaware of this until the controversy with Black Wolf. Since there had never been an instance of another hosted project having serious moderation difficulties, it didn't occur to me to specifically check on Wings of Dawn. It was a black swan event. I'm not sure why Wings of Dawn is unique in this respect; maybe it has something to do with anime, I dunno. But the point is that if Spoon reported any posts or posted any support threads during this time period, I would have probably ignored them since I wasn't personally interested in the project. (And I think it's reasonable to keep up with certain projects more than others; I doubt any one person has played all, or even almost all, of the campaigns or hosted projects published by HLP.) So to the extent that Spoon requested help and I didn't provide the admin backup that he, as a hosted project moderator, is entitled to, I apologize.
Anyway, Karajorma and Zacam aren't the only ones to be paying attention to the thread; I too am very interested in this discussion. I do have some ideas on what we can do next; I was mulling over whether it would be a good idea to start a couple of new threads here, each devoted to discussing a particular prospective issue. (For example, one thread on how to use the Hammer and whether the admins should moderate in person and the ramifications; one thread on how precisely to elucidate Wheaton's Law; one thread on the appropriate use of moderator power, etc.)
One thing that people have been complaining about is that the new rules were drafted without any community input. That's not really true, at least from our perspective. We had a fairly lengthy discussion in the Global Moderator forum about the need for new rules and how to go about drafting them. Now some may cite this as an example of the HLP staff being insular, but really, the admins viewed it as opening up the rules process to community input, because previous rules had been drafted solely in the Administrator forum. Now obviously there are other perspectives in play, but the plus side to this thread is that we're able to hash those things out.
And I was as surprised as mjn.mixael to see Zacam make
a very reasonable, thoughtful, and rational post that went almost completely ignored. If you read through that page of the thread, there's heated discussion, Zacam's post, and then heated discussion resumes as if his post wasn't even there.
I'd like to propose that Zacam take the lead on drafting a new set of rules, whether that takes the form of a few simple bullet points or a more elaborate prescription. It may be based on consensus or community-submitted suggestions, but Zacam should be the one actually writing it.
Oh, and one final thing for now. In the Global Moderator discussion, we focused on the mechanics of the policy, the nuts and bolts of what and how. It occurred to me during that discussion that a rather large gap in our understanding of the situation is
why. Many admins and global mods don't want to moderate Gen Disc because their decisions and actions have been fiercely challenged. Two global moderators felt burnt out and wanted to resign. On the other hand, many forum members see the HLP staff as aloof, uncaring, or arbitrary. Both sides get exasperated when talking with the other. There's a significant human factors part of the equation that's not being addressed very well.