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by jodrellblank
2438 days ago
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I don't know if this is worth nitpicking, as an English person I'm less familiar with how people use "due process" casually; I assume its casual use means "a fair procedure was followed" and that is fine for your comment, but it is also "the legal requirement that the state must respect all legal rights that are owed to a person"[1]. In other discussions I've seen wording that moderators were "fired", as if they had been employees. If she actually was an employee, fired under strange circumstances and denied legal rights by the state, that would be more serious issue and change many views on StackExchange the company. I nitpick because I think it helps to keep an appropriate context that much of this is arguing about perceptions, experiences, fair treatment and site direction, but is not about any legal-related accusations that I know of relating to moderators. Especially as there is legal concern about the content relicensing[2]. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Due_process [2] https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/333089/stack-exchan... |
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As far as due process goes, there was an established process on the website for removing moderators, which StackExchange did not follow in her removal. Nothing legally questionable about it since they can run their site how they will, but certainly questionable enough to burn goodwill.
[1] https://cellio.dreamwidth.org/2019/10/15/stack-overflow-dela...
[2] https://www.theregister.co.uk/2019/10/01/stack_exchange_cont...