@Zephyrus
To be honest - sparking a discussion among the staff is way more than I would ever anticipate from this thread alone. Thanks for leaving an encouraging post - staff engagement in the debate - even if behind the scenes - will ultimately result in changes that will benefit MD. And even if it doesn't go my way - it's progress nonetheless.
@kaf
Yeh, we kinda dropped it somewhere in the discussion as too controversial. Current proposal is no administrative process at all, but bans working only for chapter comments.
@Teasday
You are very much against the whole thing from the get go and your proposal feels, honestly, antagonistic in nature. GenuineSounds' three strike system would take literally 3 hours to build on top of what you propose (probably less if it were in the design from the start) and it would alleviate much of the controversy that giving powers to creators is causing - but you categorically reject it without giving any reason. Please reconsider this from an objective point of view. When, as you put it, "giving Groups rope to hang themselves with" - isn't it better to give them a bit less of that rope just to make them actively TRY HARD if they aim to do enough damage to hang themselves? And is it really a good idea to ignore any and all complaints?
Your post comes from a dark place where a developer's hart descends whenever someone asks them to estimate something they are vehemently against. At least that's how it sounds. And while I sympathize with your plight (I really do) - I think that pushing such a categorical stance as you did is not an attempt to move the discussion forward, but rather to curb-stomp it to the ground. For a regular user it would be entirely dismissible, but your developer clout does give it more power. It's not my place to police your tone, approach and opinion - I merely ask you to try to consider it from an objective view point.
@Valkynaz
This is a long one with a variety of topics to address, so I left it for last.
Being an adult.
Social dynamics dictate, that no response is a good response for an entitled brat, who doesn't consider anyone's well-being but their own. Being an adult is catering to them and is a lost cause, as all explanations just go right past them as if they were a light breeze. I've seen people saying "if your job prevents you for doing more free stuff, then quit your job, you whining pussy" - and those were clearly not jovial quips - these people actually meant exactly what it says verbatim. On the other hand ignoring them will just make them bitch more and may cause other readers to start viewing you as an elitist. And I won't even bother to mention giving in and lashing out - that leaves a taste of dog food in the mouths of all who even brush against it. But having the power to slap the entitled brat once or twice against the wrists goes a long way in terms of both education of the brat and the well-being of the slapper. Even if that power remains unused.
Group investment in MD
I oppose the notion that the only investment that glues a creator to Mangadex is a financial one. There are multiple ways to make pulling out not the first recourse, but the very last one (I can think of a couple off the top of my head). And one of the best is having a community you interacted with and invested time in nurturing. If MD is just a secondary upload dump - then pulling from it is cheap as fuck. If it's a community you engaged with - then it means something more. It's just human nature.
And as I previously stated when answering someone else "
Drama between groups is not something that MD is qualified nor willing to do in this stage of its existence. Curbing the drama between groups and readers by empowering groups is what I am postulating."
Monetization
Yeah, I agree I didn't make myself clear there. I of course meant either passive monetization (ads) or voluntary active monetization (donations). I agree that obligatory active monetization of scanlation would be both morally and legally wrong. Thus we seem to be on the same side in this argument.
Scanlation sits somewhere on the fringe of moral behavior and somewhere just one step beyond the border of legality. I personally hold the view that if no one would translate the work, I wouldn't be able to see it, so if the group contributed some money to the author (by buying his stuff in the first place) than it's one massively diluted purchase vs no additional purchase - which is objectively better (though not by much).
Power and abuse
Again, quoting myself, "
I've many times seen internet twats lose their twatiness the moment they actually got power - cause it cultivated a sense of responsibility for that power and was a strong incentive to behave better, so as the power doesn't get taken away." I stand by this statement. I believe that when the power is given - the simple fact of having it will automatically put groups at much more ease and will disincentivize them from dropping nukes.
Buy you're asking me to consider "what can go wrong" and my answer is pretty much what Teasday predicts: "a group manages to permanently fuck up their reputation" - that is the worst outcome. But to whom? Who would carry the brunt of the aftermath of such a cataclysm? The ones who abused power - that's who. And thus the system contains a mechanism, that allows it to auto-correct itself. People stop engaging with you, you lose readers and clout, you get sniped by someone more likable and engaged in the community - and suddenly everyone is on their side, not yours. Is that not fair punishment? And organic to boot.
Because, you see, the more of a nobody you are on the internet, the more power you have over other people. Once you're out there on the pedestal and people in droves start seeing and judging your actions - then reputation kicks in and reputation is what changes a simple game of "prisoner's dilemma" into a social ecosystem.