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by JohnBooty 913 days ago
I ran a small community (thousands of members) that way and I think it was the best (or rather, least bad) approach.

There are a few reasons why it worked IMO, but the practices seem extremely difficult to scale.

- I spent a lot of time building good will in the community: personally interacting with members, calling out great community participation, etc. My positive interactions outweighed negative probably 5:1 or 10:1.

- I used the ban hammer exceedingly rarely. Like, probably about twice per year over the course of ten years.

- This was a pay-gated community, which cut down on troublemakers

- Moderators enforced policy, but I was the only one who could actually ban