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Main Authors: Wang, Kaixuan, Clarke, Loraine, Dreue, Carl-Cyril J, Zhou, Guancheng, Jacques, Jason T.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.02868
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author Wang, Kaixuan
Clarke, Loraine
Dreue, Carl-Cyril J
Zhou, Guancheng
Jacques, Jason T.
author_facet Wang, Kaixuan
Clarke, Loraine
Dreue, Carl-Cyril J
Zhou, Guancheng
Jacques, Jason T.
contents Online communities serve as essential support channels for People Who Use Drugs (PWUD), providing access to peer support and harm reduction information. The moderation of these communities involves consequential decisions affecting member safety, yet existing sociotechnical systems provide insufficient support for moderators. Through interviews with experienced moderators from PWUD forums on Reddit, we examine the unique nature of this work and its implications for HCI and content moderation research. We demonstrate that this work constitutes a distinct form of public health intervention characterised by three challenges: (1) high-stakes risk evaluation requiring pharmacological expertise, (2) time-critical crisis intervention spanning platform content and external drug market surveillance, and (3) navigation of structural conflicts where platform policies designed to minimise legal liability directly oppose community harm reduction goals. Our findings extend existing HCI moderation frameworks by revealing how legal liability structures can systematically undermine expert moderators' protective work, with implications for other marginalised communities facing similar regulatory tensions, including abortion care and sex work contexts. We identify two necessary shifts in sociotechnical design: moving from binary classification to multi-dimensional approaches that externalise competing factors moderators must balance, and shifting from low-level rule programming to high-level example-based instruction. However, we surface unresolved tensions around volunteer labour sustainability and risks of incorporating automated systems in high-stakes health contexts, identifying open questions requiring HCI research attention. These findings inform the design of platforms that better accommodate vulnerable populations whose health needs conflict with regulatory frameworks.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2508_02868
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Critical Challenges in Content Moderation for People Who Use Drugs (PWUD): Insights into Online Harm Reduction Practices from Moderators
Wang, Kaixuan
Clarke, Loraine
Dreue, Carl-Cyril J
Zhou, Guancheng
Jacques, Jason T.
Human-Computer Interaction
Computers and Society
Online communities serve as essential support channels for People Who Use Drugs (PWUD), providing access to peer support and harm reduction information. The moderation of these communities involves consequential decisions affecting member safety, yet existing sociotechnical systems provide insufficient support for moderators. Through interviews with experienced moderators from PWUD forums on Reddit, we examine the unique nature of this work and its implications for HCI and content moderation research. We demonstrate that this work constitutes a distinct form of public health intervention characterised by three challenges: (1) high-stakes risk evaluation requiring pharmacological expertise, (2) time-critical crisis intervention spanning platform content and external drug market surveillance, and (3) navigation of structural conflicts where platform policies designed to minimise legal liability directly oppose community harm reduction goals. Our findings extend existing HCI moderation frameworks by revealing how legal liability structures can systematically undermine expert moderators' protective work, with implications for other marginalised communities facing similar regulatory tensions, including abortion care and sex work contexts. We identify two necessary shifts in sociotechnical design: moving from binary classification to multi-dimensional approaches that externalise competing factors moderators must balance, and shifting from low-level rule programming to high-level example-based instruction. However, we surface unresolved tensions around volunteer labour sustainability and risks of incorporating automated systems in high-stakes health contexts, identifying open questions requiring HCI research attention. These findings inform the design of platforms that better accommodate vulnerable populations whose health needs conflict with regulatory frameworks.
title Critical Challenges in Content Moderation for People Who Use Drugs (PWUD): Insights into Online Harm Reduction Practices from Moderators
topic Human-Computer Interaction
Computers and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.02868