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2.5 KiB
2.5 KiB
Moderating open organizations
An open organization is one where anyone can join without an invitation. Moderation is a big part of making an open community work.
Prevention
- Disallow disposable email addresses or require users to log in via GitHub.
- Restrict who can create streams, create bots or add custom emoji.
- Link to a code of conduct in your organization description (displayed on the registration page).
- Create at least one default stream where only admins can post.
- Configure a waiting period before new members in the organization can do disruptive actions like creating streams.
- Restrict email visibility to reduce the likelihood of off-platform spam.
Response
- Ban (deactivate) users acting in bad faith. You can reactivate them later if they repent.
- Delete messages, delete streams, and unsubscribe users from streams.
- Rename topics.
- Change users' names (e.g. to "Spammer")
- Deactivate bots or delete custom emoji.
- Instruct users to collapse messages that they don't want to see.
In the works
- Mark as spam. This will allow non-admins to collectively impose a temporary ban on a user.
- Delete spammer. This will wipe the user from your Zulip, by deleting all their messages and reactions, banning them, etc.
- Mute user. This will allow an individual user to hide the messages of another individual user.
- New users join as guests. This will allow users joining via open registration to have extremely limited permissions by default, but still enough permissions to ask the core team a question or to get a feel for your community.
- Public archive. This will give a read-only view of selected streams, removing the need in some organizations for having open registration.