(though idk about the unfettered toxic aggression part there are some communities that can get along fine with good old fashioned peer pressure in my experience)
In relatively small, closed communities where most people are familiar with each other, that can indeed be the case, especially when the people involved know each other outside of the internet. Sadly, it tends to turn disastrous once the community grows large and anonymous enough.
Not enthusiastic about the shifting of this discussion. Given the segregated 'no one comes out of their corner' nature of the subforums around here, relocating a discussion which is only meaningful to that subforum out of it, seems like a great way to stifle the topic. But I'll give benefit of the doubt that it was an aesthetic/organisational decision rather than that.
While it's true that being outside the Duels forum is likely to lead to lower participation by Duels-focused users, being inside the Duels forum would lead to zero participation from anyone else, because nobody else would be aware that it existed. A discussion of how to improve moderation policy and practice, which is what I hope to see happen here, affects much more than just one forum, and everyone deserves the ability to participate.
As for the ban. Im going to act as Hakeem's voice here (without his knowledge or consent!) and clarify that 'without warning, out of the blue' part of his complaint. This ban took place 2-3 days after the content in question was moderated away, while he was interacting with the community. In cases like this, where the moderation team has to deliberate a decision and get back to it....reach out to the user. Banning them out of the blue, several days after you've moderated offense away is jarring and pressed buttons a lot better than a ban issued during moderation of the content.
I definitely agree that such a situation is...let's say less than perfect. It's a side effect of our moderation staff being volunteers with limited time; things like (for example) flame wars are urgent and must be stopped before they spiral out of control, and the publicly-visible response is often easy and quick to perform, so it happens relatively quickly--the moderator has ten minutes free? Done. But the private response--looking at each involved user's history for past warnings, sorting out appropriate penalties, writing up individual PMs, applying suspensions--all of that takes much, much more time, especially when discussion needs to occur between moderators before a decision is reached. Therefore, it will often not conclude for several days after the initial cleanup is performed.
This is definitely something that can be improved. While the inherent problems of limited moderator availability and time aren't going to change any time soon, we should be able to improve communication to make it clear that the public action is not the end of the matter, whether that involves saying so in the public response or some other method--I'm very open to suggestions on what people think would be best.
Which brings me to some feedback entirely my own. Why do suspensions work like this? I've used these board formats. You can restrict users from being able to post, without locking them out of their account. If you're not perma-banning a user....do this. Attempting to log on and being rejected and told you're unwelcome and to check your email.....is not great at resolving situations without escalation. Allowing them use of their account to view, PM and interact with moderators? I dont see the down side. At all.
To the best of my knowledge, suspensions work like this because that's the way phpBB normally handles them; if you've used forums that do it differently, that's most likely either because options were changed or a mod was installed.
Looking through the options on the back end, there doesn't appear to be an easy way to change how suspensions and bans work at this time. I can get Welder to look into what can be done, but I can't currently make any promises beyond that.
Gobo, thanks for the full disclosure. You have one item wrong, Hakeem didn't try to provoke Steve in that thread.
Perhaps that was not his intent. But regardless of intent, it was an easily foreseeable consequence, one Hakeem has specifically been warned about in the past. In cases such as that, exactly who struck first makes very little difference.
Secondly, and less important, you say that Hakeem breached the code by attacking another user. The problem is that shadowcran is not a user. He was banned from here forever and is intended longer a user. Hakeem probably assumed, as did I, that you can go after him without fear of reprisal Since he's not a user.
That would be an incorrect assumption; anyone who currently has or has ever had an account is a user, regardless of whether they are currently present or not.