maybe it would be time they elect one or to new co-admins and forum moderators, but then again it's a matter of finding who to trust for the job...
Well, in Wikipedia administrators get voted by the community. Not every wiki-user has the right to vote (you have to have a minimum number of edits and fulfill some more restrictions to get the right to vote).
This could be done simmilar in TBS. Here is a draft for a co-admin-votingscript:
Is the last visit of one admin more than two weeks ago? -> start voting a new co-admin:
- Create a new News-entry with a link to the election
- List all users who fulfill the followin restrictions. At start, list all of them and initialise each of them with voteCount 0. Order by voteCount and solved challenges:
- Check how many challenges are solved by the member with rank 250. For this voting, every member with more solved challenges can get admin
- The user has to have confirmed that he is willing to get admin in \"My Account\"
- The user has to have written at least 20 posts in the forum.
- The user has to have logged in in the last week.
- The existing admins may take a veto which instantly removes the user and sends messages to all users who have voted for him.
- After two weeks the two users with the most votes get into the next round of voting a co-admin. Make a notice in \"News\"
- After two weeks the user with most votes gets a new co-admin if he has at least 50 votes.
If you thought about real web-admin work (programming/changing something directly on the server, not via bright-shadows-interface), then OpenSource could be helpful. The bright-shadows-software could be pulished e.g. on code.google.com and get new input there. So the existing admins would \"only\" have to control if the changes are ok and upload them.
But both suggestions are far more than what I thought of. I think the data I ask for already exists. If not, Pikwi could get and publish it quite easily. It has only to be set up.