Why do volunteer content moderators quit? Burnout, conflict, and harmful behaviors

Author:

Schöpke-Gonzalez Angela M.1ORCID,Atreja Shubham1,Shin Han Na1,Ahmed Najmin1,Hemphill Libby1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Michigan, USA

Abstract

Moderating content on social media can lead to severe psychological distress. However, little is known about the type, severity, and consequences of distress experienced by volunteer content moderators (VCMs), who do this work voluntarily. We present results from a survey that investigated why Facebook Group and subreddit VCMs quit, and whether reasons for quitting are correlated with psychological distress, demographics, and/or community characteristics. We found that VCMs are likely to experience psychological distress that stems from struggles with other moderators, moderation team leads’ harmful behaviors, and having too little available time, and these experiences of distress relate to their reasons for quitting. While substantial research has focused on making the task of detecting and assessing toxic content easier or less distressing for moderation workers, our study shows that social interventions for VCM workers, for example, to support them in navigating interpersonal conflict with other moderators, may be necessary.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science,Communication

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1. The psychology of volunteer moderators: Tradeoffs between participation, belonging, and norms in online community governance;New Media & Society;2024-07-29

2. LLM-Mod: Can Large Language Models Assist Content Moderation?;Extended Abstracts of the CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems;2024-05-02

3. AppealMod: Inducing Friction to Reduce Moderator Workload of Handling User Appeals;Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction;2024-04-17

4. Combating Islamophobia: Compromise, Community, and Harmony in Mitigating Harmful Online Content;ACM Transactions on Social Computing;2024-03-31

5. Towards Intersectional Moderation: An Alternative Model of Moderation Built on Care and Power;Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction;2023-09-28

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