Kyleep Retired Moderator. Joined: Sep 29, Messages: 5, Likes Received: 2, Joined: Nov 22, Messages: 4, Likes Received: 1, I just want to point out that no staff members feel any higher or lesser than the staff above or below them.
We are all equals and enjoy staffing the server. Funny x 1 Winner x 1 Friendly x 1. Player New Member. Joined: Feb 9, Messages: 2, Likes Received: Interesting and Informative. Muri Expert Member. Joined: Oct 19, Messages: 3, Likes Received: Jack Forum Fanatic.
Joined: Jan 23, Messages: 8, Likes Received: 1, PlatinumDefend3 apporves this message. Popcorn Forum Fanatic. Joined: Mar 30, Messages: 4, Likes Received: 3, Nice job!
Resources for Page Admins. Fix a Problem. Fundraisers and Donations. Facebook Mobile Apps. Managing Your Account. Privacy, Safety and Security. Policies and Reporting. What is the difference between an admin and a moderator in a Facebook group? Change platform:. There are two roles for people who manage groups: admins and moderators.
The table below outlines the roles and what they're able to do:. Generally speaking, moderators are supposed to supervise and control users' activity, especially content they publish. Administrators' task is more technical, they, say, fix bugs, change something on the site, add new features etc. In other words, a moderator deals with the content whereas an administrator deals with the platform itself. Now, Stack Exchange community keeps an eye on what questions users publish, they close them, protect, put on hold, migrate.
They do not fix issues when the database server is updated to a new version or when the site's appearance has to be changed. Thus they are moderators. Trying to answer in regards to the specific definition of the roles and how they came to be, not specific to StackExchange. An administrator has authority over a system that a regular person does not. They have elevated access. You can compare this e.
The elevated rights of an administrator are usually potentially damaging if the admin intends malice , but the administrators are expected to only wield their power for "benevolent purposes". The consequence of this is that the normal users rely on the administrator for certain tasks. This is by design. The elevated rights are only given to a subset of users the admins , and the admins are then expected to help the users with their problems.
As an analogy: if we give a police officer the right to speed when in pursuit of a criminal, that means we expect them to try and catch criminals. But here's a problem: the administrators often get overloaded with irrelevant questions. Since a normal user does not have the power to e. User A might flag user B for banning because he always makes typos, or he disagrees with user A. As a result, administrators spend more of their time telling people that they can't help them with what they're asking.
To continue the analogy: the police have to explain to a civilian that they cannot just "steal back" the item that someone stole from the civilian.
Enter the role of a moderator. Moderators are the initial point of contact. They listen to the complaints of a user, check if it's something that the admins are able to help with and allowed to , and only then send the work on to an administrator.
To continue the analogy: imagine if we made a police helpline.
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