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+---
+layout: page
+title: FixMyStreet Administrator's Manual
+author: dave
+---
+
+
+# Administrator's Manual
+
+<p class="lead">What is it like running a FixMyStreet site? This guide
+explains what you can expect, and the types of problem that you might
+encounter. It includes examples of how mySociety manages their own site, <a
+href="https://www.fixmystreet.com/">fixmystreet.com</a>.</p>
+
+## About this document
+
+We'll be giving suggestions and examples of problems from our experience in
+the UK. But there is more than one way to solve issues, and you may well find
+that your own solutions work best.
+
+We hope that you will contribute to this document with your own ideas and
+feedback. You can do this by [contacting us](https://www.mysociety.org/contact/)
+directly, or joining the mailing list.
+
+The [FixMyStreet mailing list](/community) is a great place to share ideas or
+ask questions. Everyone on there has either built, or is building, a
+FixMyStreet site, so they have real-life knowledge and are keen to help.
+
+It's a friendly community, and we recommend that you join in and ask as many
+questions as you need to.
+
+## Other helpful documents
+
+* **Before** you decide to run FixMyStreet, you should read the
+ ["Can we fix it?" DIY Guide]({{ "/The-FixMyStreet-Platform-DIY-Guide-v1.1.pdf" | relative_url }}).
+
+* If you are hosting FixMyStreet yourself, you **must** read the [installation
+ instructions](/install) first. Once you've done that, you'll probably need
+ the information about [customising your site](/customising) too.
+
+* This guide is just one of several useful pages for <a
+ href="{{ "/glossary/#administrator" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">administrators</a> in the
+ section about [running FixMyStreet](/running). This document is the most
+ general, so is a good place to start.
+
+## Find your administrator
+
+Every FixMyStreet site needs an <a href="{{ "/glossary/#administrator" | relative_url }}"
+class="glossary__link">administrator</a>. Even when the site is running smoothly,
+your users will need help, and there will be regular administrative tasks to
+perform. So, sooner rather than later, you will need to think about who will
+be responsible.
+
+<div class="attention-box info">
+ If you're just starting on your FixMyStreet project, it's possible that you
+ have not found an administrator yet, or that you didn't realise you needed
+ one. Don't worry! Look through this document to see why you need one, and
+ what sort of tasks they'll be doing.
+</div>
+
+## Who do I need?
+
+The team who sets up the site and those who keep it running day-to-day might
+(or might not) be the same people.
+
+**To set up a new installation**, we recommend you have at least **one
+developer** and **one administrator** who can work on the site.
+
+At the beginning you'll be quite busy. You'll be doing a lot of things, like
+customising your site, collecting the email addresses your users' <a
+href="{{ "/glossary/#report" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">problem reports</a> will be sent to,
+and perhaps [promoting your project]({{ "/running/promotion/" | relative_url }}).
+
+**Once your site is up and running**, you can manage with just **one
+administrator**.
+
+The administrator deals with problems and questions from users - we call this
+'user support'. He or she will also answer questions from the bodies you send
+your reports to.
+
+Each day, the administrator of mySociety's UK FixMyStreet site spends, on
+average, between 15 minutes and an hour on user support.
+
+Ideally, your administrator will work every day, as there may be urgent
+requests (see "Types of tasks", below). But if you cannot manage this, a
+couple of sessions a week will be sufficient.
+
+Our administrator usually checks support emails twice a day, in the morning
+and at lunchtime. This breaks the work into very short blocks, but also
+ensures that she can deal with any urgent problems promptly.
+
+## The administration pages ("admin")
+
+### Security
+
+By default, the administration pages &mdash; the "admin" &mdash; can be found at
+`/admin`. These pages must be secured against public access.
+
+We strongly recommend you access your admin over a secure connection, such as
+HTTPS. This means that everything that goes between your computer and the
+server is encrypted, so can't easily be intercepted.
+
+It's also a good idea to allow access to admin only from your own, trusted IP
+addresses.
+
+Both of these precautions require system configuration (that is, they depend
+on settings outside FixMyStreet). If you're running an Apache webserver, you
+can do this using `htauth` &mdash; see [the Apache htauth
+documentation](http://httpd.apache.org/docs/current/mod/mod_authn_file.html).
+If you're using an external hosting service, their technical support staff may
+be willing set this up for you if you can't do it yourself.
+
+It's very important that you do secure your admin: so if you really do have
+problems setting this up, [get in touch](/community/) and we'll try to help.
+
+### Contents
+
+The Admin interface is divided into the following sections. You can access
+them by clicking on the link at the top of any admin page:
+
+* **Summary page** <br/> The summary page shows the number of live <a
+ href="{{ "/glossary/#report" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">reports</a>, <a
+ href="{{ "/glossary/#update" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">updates</a>, <a
+ href="{{ "/glossary/#alert" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">alerts</a>, sent
+ <a href="{{ "/glossary/#survey" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">questionnaires</a> and
+ bodies' <a href="{{ "/glossary/#contact" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">contacts</a>.
+
+ <p>
+ This page is useful when the media ask how many reports your site has
+ processed. You can also use it to motivate your team, or to prove yourself
+ to official bodies.
+ </p>
+
+* **Bodies** <br/> <a href="{{ "/glossary/#body" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">Bodies</a> are the
+ authorities that your site sends reports to. Each body has its own page in
+ the admin, listing the categories of problem that they accept (eg, potholes,
+ street lights, etc) and the email address associated with the category.
+
+ <p>
+ Bodies sometimes change their email addresses, and dealing with this is a
+ regular task for an administrator. You can add or edit bodies from these
+ pages. You can also add or edit their <a href="{{ "/glossary/#category" | relative_url }}"
+ class="glossary__link">categories</a> and <a href="{{ "/glossary/#contact" | relative_url }}"
+ class="glossary__link">contact</a> email addresses. Bodies are associated with
+ one or more <a href="{{ "/glossary/#area" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">areas</a>. <a
+ href="{{ "/running/bodies_and_contacts/" | relative_url }}">More information on bodies</a>.
+ </p>
+
+* **Reports** <br/> The reports page lets you search for, and edit <a
+ href="{{ "/glossary/#report" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">problem reports</a> and updates.
+
+ <p>
+ You will need to do this often - for example, when a user has emailed to
+ complain about a report, or to ask you to check if the report has been
+ sent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You can search by the user's name, email address, or a word or phrase from
+ the report.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If your database is very large &mdash; like the UK FixMyStreet, which has many
+ thousands of reports &mdash; some searches may be a little slow. But if you
+ know the ID of the report, you can tell FixMyStreet to find it directly,
+ using <code>id:</code> first. The ID is in the URL of the live report: for
+ example, on our site, we can find
+ <code>https://www.fixmystreet.com/report/391267</code> by searching for
+ <code>id:391267</code>.
+ </p>
+
+* **Timeline** <br/> The timeline is a log of FixMyStreet activity: report
+ updates, status changes, and so on.
+
+* **Survey** <br/> By default, FixMyStreet sends out <a
+ href="{{ "/glossary/#survey" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">surveys</a> (also called
+ questionnaires) to users four weeks after they reported a problem.
+
+ <p>
+ We use these surveys to collect data on the performance of the bodies. The
+ survey page shows statistics based on the responses, which again can be
+ useful for the media, or for research when you are looking at how
+ effective your site has been.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If you don't want your FixMyStreet site to send out surveys, you can
+ switch off this behaviour in a <a
+ href="{{ "/customising/cobrand-module/" | relative_url }}">cobrand module</a>.
+ </p>
+
+* **Users** <br/> You can [manage users](/running/users) from this section.
+ For example you can edit a <a href="{{ "/glossary/#user-account" | relative_url }}">user's</a>
+ email address, or <a href="{{ "/glossary/#flagged" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">flag</a> or
+ <a href="{{ "/glossary/#abuse-list" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">ban</a> or abusive one.
+
+ <p>
+ Each user has an individual page in the admin, and it is sometimes quicker
+ to search for a user than a report, if they have contacted you by email
+ and have not mentioned which report they are talking about. Each user's
+ page lists all their activity on the site.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By default, any staff users (those that belong to a body) are listed on
+ this page.
+ </p>
+
+* **Flagged** <br/> You can <a href="{{ "/glossary/#flag" | relative_url }}"
+ class="glossary__link">flag</a> any report or user. This does not <a
+ href="{{ "/glossary/#abuse-list" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">ban</a> the user or delete the
+ report - it is just a way of marking a person or a situation as potentially
+ troublesome. Note that you can only flag a report or user from the report
+ or page.
+
+ <p>
+ This can be useful if your team has more than one <a
+ href="{{ "/glossary/#administrator" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">administrator</a>. <a
+ href="{{ "/running/users/" | relative_url }}">More information about managing users</a>.
+ </p>
+
+* **Stats** <br/> The stats page lets you analyse the number and types of <a
+ href="{{ "/glossary/#report" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">report</a> over a particular date
+ range. Optionally, you can restrict it to report on a single <a
+ href="{{ "/glossary/#body" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">body</a>.
+
+ <p>
+ You might use this if you want to know how many reports have been sent
+ within, for example, the last three months, or how many reports have been
+ sent to a specific body since launch.
+ </p>
+
+* **Configuration** <br/> This page shows you a summary of the live
+ configuration information for your site.
+
+<a name="report-states"></a>
+
+## Report states
+
+A <a href="{{ "/glossary/#report" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">problem report</a> can be in
+one of these <a href="{{ "/glossary/#state" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">states</a>:
+
+<dl class="reveal-on-click" data-reveal-noun="report states">
+ <dt>
+ Unconfirmed
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ Until FixMyStreet is certain that the report's creator is genuine, its
+ state remains <em>unconfirmed</em>. Unconfirmed reports do not appear on
+ the website. A report is confirmed (and its state becomes <em>open</em>)
+ when:
+ </p>
+ <ul>
+ <li>
+ its creator clicks on the link in FixMyStreet's confirmation email, or
+ </li>
+ <li>
+ its creator was already logged in when the report was created, or
+ </li>
+ <li>
+ an <a href="{{ "/glossary/#administrator" | relative_url }}"
+ class="glossary__link">administrator</a> confirms it (by searching in
+ <strong>Reports</strong> and changing the state by clicking
+ <strong>edit</strong>).
+ </li>
+ </ul>
+ </dd>
+ <dt>
+ Open
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ An <em>open</em> report is one that has not been fixed or closed. This
+ generally means that the body has not yet attended to the problem. Also,
+ this implies that the report is not <em>unconfirmed</em> (see above). <a
+ href="{{ "/glossary/#staff-user" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">Staff users</a> can set
+ problems to have alternative "open" states, which by default are:
+ </p>
+ <ul>
+ <li>
+ <em>investigating</em>
+ </li>
+ <li>
+ <em>in progress</em>
+ </li>
+ <li>
+ <em>action scheduled</em>
+ </li>
+ </ul>
+ <p>This list of states can be edited in the admin interface.</p>
+ </dd>
+ <dt>
+ Fixed
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ <em>Fixed</em> reports are marked in two possible ways:
+ </p>
+ <ul>
+ <li>
+ <em>fixed - user</em>
+ <br>
+ If a user marks them as fixed in an <a href="{{ "/glossary/#update" | relative_url }}"
+ class="glossary__link">update</a>, or (for the report creator only) as part
+ of the process of answering the 4-week <a href="{{ "/glossary/#survey" | relative_url }}"
+ class="glossary__link">survey</a>.
+ </li>
+ <li>
+ <em>fixed - council</em>
+ <br>
+ If updated by a <a href="{{ "/glossary/#staff-user" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">staff
+ user</a> from the body responsible for that report.
+ </li>
+ </ul>
+ </dd>
+ <dt>
+ Closed
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ A <a href="{{ "/glossary/#staff-user" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">staff user</a>
+ associated with the report's body (or an <a
+ href="{{ "/glossary/#administrator" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">administrator</a>) can
+ mark a report as <em>closed</em> without declaring it to be
+ <em>fixed</em>. Possible states by default are:
+ </p>
+ <ul>
+ <li><em>no further action</em></li>
+ <li><em>not responsible</em></li>
+ <li><em>duplicate</em></li>
+ <li><em>internal referral</em></li>
+ </ul>
+ <p>This list of states can also be edited in the admin interface.</p>
+ </dd>
+ <dt>
+ Hidden
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ Reports can be hidden by an <a href="{{ "/glossary/#administrator" | relative_url }}"
+ class="glossary__link">administrator</a>, or (if the <a
+ href="{{ "/glossary/cobrand" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">cobrand</a> allows it) by a <a
+ href="{{ "/glossary/#staff-user" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">staff user</a> associated
+ with the body to which it was sent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hiding a report means that it is unpublished, and can no longer be seen
+ on the live site - usually because it is abusive or inappropriate.
+ Hidden reports remain in the database, and can be republished if
+ necessary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Remember that a hidden report will probably have been sent to the <a
+ href="{{ "/glossary/#body" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">body</a> responsible (so it can
+ still be fixed) &mdash; hiding a report simply prevents it being displayed.
+ </p>
+ </dd>
+</dl>
+
+## Types of Tasks
+
+There are two main types of tasks for FixMyStreet <a
+href="{{ "/glossary/#administrator" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">administrators</a>.
+
+* **Maintenance** tasks can be fixed through the FixMyStreet admin interface.
+
+* **User support** is generally handled by email.
+
+The most common maintenance tasks are described below, based on our own
+experience with the UK site.
+
+<dl class="reveal-on-click" data-reveal-noun="types of task">
+ <dt>
+ Bounce-backs / dead email addresses from the bodies
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ When FixMyStreet sends a <a href="{{ "/glossary/#report" | relative_url }}"
+ class="glossary__link">problem report</a> to the <a href="{{ "/glossary/#body" | relative_url }}"
+ class="glossary__link">body</a> responsible, sometimes that email bounces
+ back. This usually means the <a href="{{ "/glossary/#contact" | relative_url }}"
+ class="glossary__link">contact</a> email address you've got for that body (and
+ that <a href="{{ "/glossary/#category" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">category</a>) is
+ wrong, or has changed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You can tell which report &mdash; and which body and category &mdash;
+ caused the problem by looking at the returned email.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, in admin, go to <strong>Bodies</strong> and look at the contact
+ email addresses for that body. Check that the email address looks
+ correct (for example, if there are several, see if they adhere to the
+ same format).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If everything looks OK, you can check online to see if you can find a
+ better address. Otherwise, you'll need to contact the body and confirm
+ the correct email address to use.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes the email address may be correct, but there's another problem
+ which prevents it receiving the email (such as a full mailbox). Be sure
+ to check the error message that the mail server returned in the
+ bounce-back message.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When you have found the correct email address, make sure that you
+ re-send the report which bounced. And if you can't find an address, you
+ should contact the user to let them know that unfortunately you couldn't
+ deliver their report.
+ </p>
+ </dd>
+ <dt>
+ Removing personal data from reports or making them anonymous
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes people include personal details such as their address in their
+ report. Or they forget to tick the box to make their reports anonymous.
+ Sometimes a user decides to make their report anonymous after they have
+ submitted it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all cases, you can edit the report in admin by going to
+ <strong>Reports</strong>. Find the report you want, then click on
+ <strong>Edit</strong>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Remove the details that should not be shown (we recommend replacing them
+ with something like “[address removed, but sent to
+ <em>name-of-body</em>]”).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If necessary, you can mark the report as anonymous with the yes/no
+ selection box.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Be sure to save your changes (click <strong>submit changes</strong>)
+ when you've finished editing.
+ </p>
+ </dd>
+ <dt>
+ Removing reports when users say they didn't realise their report would be
+ public
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ Occasionally people who are reporting issues don't understand that the
+ site is public, and they don't want their name associated with the
+ report.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the UK, mySociety's first step is to anonymise the report. If the
+ user insists that the report must be removed, you can hide it instead -
+ then let your user know that you've made the changes they asked for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We're generally happy to hide such reports because we don't want to
+ anger our users. And although this removes them from the website, the
+ problem report will still have been sent to the body responsible.
+ </p>
+ </dd>
+ <dt>
+ Removing inappropriate reports
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ There is a 'report abuse' link at the foot of every report, which any
+ user can use to alert you to a report. You will sometimes receive emails
+ to tell you that a report or update is inappropriate or potentially
+ libellous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ UK law states that we can be held legally responsible for the content,
+ but only if we have been made aware of it. You should make yourself
+ familiar with the law in your own jurisdiction, and how it may affect
+ your liability.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In most cases, if a report has been brought to your attention, you
+ should hide it - unless there is clearly nothing wrong with it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Abuse report emails contain the admin URL of the problem report, so you
+ can click on it and change its state to <em>hidden</em>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It's generally a good idea to then tell the user who reported the abuse
+ that you have removed it. You may also wish to contact the abusive site
+ member to explain why their report has been removed.
+ </p>
+ </dd>
+ <dt>
+ Users who send a report to the support email address
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ On the UK FixMyStreet site we are careful to explain that we are an
+ independent organisation, and we do not fix street problems ourselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But we still frequently receive email that should have gone to a local
+ council. In other words, people click on the 'support' button and submit
+ a report, rather than going through the normal report-making process on
+ the site.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We send a carefully-worded response like this:
+ </p>
+ <div class="correspondence">
+ <p>
+ You have emailed the technical support team behind FixMyStreet, when
+ it looks as though you intended your message to go to your council.
+ FixMyStreet is an independent website through which you can contact
+ any council in the UK.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If you wish to report a problem please visit www.fixmystreet.com and
+ enter a postcode or street name near where the problem is located. You
+ will then be invited to click on a map to show where the problem is
+ occurring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Your message is below so that you can copy and paste it into the form.
+ *Note that all messages appear on our website, as well as going to the
+ council*.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If you are able to take the time to let us know why you emailed this
+ address rather than file a report on the site, it would really help us
+ to make the process clearer for future users.
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ You are welcome to adapt this text to your own site's needs.
+ </p>
+ </dd>
+ <dt>
+ Manually changing users' email addresses </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ Users cannot change their email addresses themselves. In admin, go to
+ <strong>Users</strong>, find the user (search by their name or the old
+ email address) and edit the email address to be the new one.
+ </p>
+ </dd>
+</dl>
+
+## Common user support queries
+
+Here is a list of the most common user support queries we get on the UK
+FixMyStreet site.
+
+<dl class="reveal-on-click" data-reveal-noun="support queries">
+ <dt>
+ A body wants to know what email addresses you have on file
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ In the UK, it's common for each body to have multiple <a
+ href="{{ "/glossary/#contact" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">contacts</a> (usually email
+ addresses) &mdash; for more information, see <a
+ href="{{ "/running/bodies_and_contacts/" | relative_url }}">About bodies and contacts</a>. Your
+ site may be the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Often, a body will make contact to ask where your reports are being
+ sent. Perhaps they are changing addresses, or they are puzzled because
+ they can see reports on the site but don't know who is receiving them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It's worth being friendly and helpful - if you have a good relationship
+ with the body, they will inform you when their contact details change,
+ and are more likely to treat your users' reports with respect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Note that you can quickly copy and paste all email addresses for a body
+ by clicking on <strong>text only version</strong> on that body's page.
+ </p>
+ </dd>
+ <dt>
+ Body replies to you, not the user
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ This can happen if the body has set up their auto-response system
+ incorrectly, for example, the body has used your support email address
+ instead of responding directly to a user.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Forward the email to the user. Let the body know you've had to do this,
+ and point out the correct email address to use (FixMyStreet sends its
+ emails with the reply-to field set to that of the user who reported the
+ problem).
+ </p>
+ </dd>
+ <dt>
+ Press enquiries or data/statistic enquiries
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ Currently any requests for data or statistics that cannot be seen on the
+ admin summary page have to be handled by a developer, by making SQL
+ queries directly on the database.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="{{ "/glossary#staff-user" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">Staff users</a> can see
+ the <a href="{{ "/glossary#dashboard" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">dashboard</a> for
+ their own body by going to <code>/dashboard</code> when they are logged
+ into the public site. If they don't have a staff user set up, offer to
+ do this for them: see <a href="{{ "/running/users/" | relative_url }}">managing users</a>.
+ </p>
+ </dd>
+ <dt>
+ User needs help on how to make a report on the site
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes you may get an email from a user saying the site isn't
+ working, or they can't use it. Remember that your users come from all
+ sectors of society, including the very elderly or those who are not used
+ to computers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You will often need to write back to clarify the problem. Ask for as
+ much detail as possible about their operating system and browser - in
+ simple words - and ask them to describe the issue precisely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Often there is no problem with the site (although you should never be
+ certain of that until you have checked). Maybe the user has not seen the
+ submit button, or doesn't understand how to upload a photo, or has not
+ understood how the site works for some other reason.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Step-by-step instructions by email can almost always help.
+ </p>
+ </dd>
+ <dt>
+ User does not receive report confirmation email
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ <strong>This is almost always because the automated confirmation email
+ has gone into the user's spam folder</strong>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ask the user to look in their spam folder (and mark email coming from
+ your domain as "not spam" so future emails don't get caught in the same
+ way). If they still can't find it, you can confirm the report from
+ within admin (see <a href="#report-states">Report States</a>, above).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If you're running FixMyStreet on your own server, you (or your system
+ administrator) can check your outgoing email logs to confirm that the
+ user's mail server accepted delivery from your end.
+ </p>
+ </dd>
+ <dt>
+ User wants to know how to change their password
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ Users don't need a password to use FixMyStreet - they can click the link
+ in the confirmation email instead. But if a user makes a large number of
+ reports, it makes sense to have a password. If they are logged into the
+ site, they do not have to confirm reports via the email link.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Any user can set a new password at any time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We send this response to requests to change the password:
+ </p>
+ <div class="correspondence">
+ When you next create a problem report or update, simply choose the
+ option that says 'No, let me confirm by email'. You will be able to
+ create a new password at that point. This will send you a confirmation
+ email. Clicking the link in that email will update your password for
+ you.
+ <p>
+ Alternatively, you can visit https://www.fixmystreet.com/auth and do
+ the same (that is, choose the 'no' option and input your new
+ password).
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Of course, make sure you change the URL in that message to match your
+ own installation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Note that there's no need to provide the old password, because the
+ change requires the user to click on the confirmation link in the email.
+ </p>
+ </dd>
+ <dt>
+ User wants to edit their problem report
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ A user cannot change their message once they have submitted it &mdash; and
+ remember that the report will have already been sent to the body
+ responsible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, if there is a good case for changing the post on the website,
+ you can do this in the admin. Go to <strong>Reports</strong>, find the
+ report you want, and click on <strong>Edit</strong>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Be sure to save your changes (click <strong>submit changes</strong>)
+ when you've finished editing.
+ </p>
+ </dd>
+ <dt>
+ User requests a new feature or reports a bug
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ You can log feature requests and bug reports by submitting (or, if you
+ prefer, by asking your developer to submit) an issue to the public
+ FixMyStreet <a
+ href="https://github.com/mysociety/fixmystreet/issues">GitHub
+ repository</a>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Always search the issues first to check that it hasn't already been
+ raised. If it has, you can add a comment noting that it's been requested
+ again by another user.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When users in the UK contact FixMyStreet support with a request for a
+ new feature, we also reply to thank the person for taking an interest in
+ the site. We really do change FixMyStreet in response to user feedback!
+ </p>
+ </dd>
+ <dt>
+ User can't find a relevant category for their problem
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ FixMyStreet constructs the list of <a href="{{ "/glossary/#category" | relative_url }}"
+ class="glossary__link">categories</a> of report (for example, "Pothole" or
+ "Graffiti") based on what services the body (or bodies) <em>in that <a
+ href="{{ "/glossary/#area" | relative_url }}" class="glossary__link">area</a></em> provide. See <a
+ href="{{ "/running/bodies_and_contacts/" | relative_url }}">Managing bodies and contacts</a> to
+ see how this works.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This has two important consequences: it means the list of categories may
+ be different depending on <em>where</em> the user is reporting the
+ problem, and it means that sometimes the category the user wants is not
+ available.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When you add categories for the bodies in your FixMyStreet installation,
+ you should consider adding an "Other" category &mdash; provided, of course,
+ that the body has a general email address for such requests to go to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Be careful, though, because if multiple bodies at the same location
+ offer a category called "Other", FixMyStreet &mdash; correctly &mdash; will send
+ such reports to all of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To understand more about about this, see <a
+ href="{{ "/running/bodies_and_contacts/" | relative_url }}">Managing bodies and contacts</a>.
+ </p>
+ </dd>
+ <dt>
+ Report has gone to wrong body
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes a report is sent to the wrong body because the user has placed
+ the pin wrongly, putting the report in a different administrative
+ jurisdiction. Or perhaps the user has chosen the wrong category, routing
+ the report to a different body.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ mySociety replies to the user asking them to resubmit the report with
+ the pin more correctly positioned, or the right category selected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This problem may indicate that the boundary data you are using is either
+ incorrect, or not accurate enough &mdash; for more information, see <a
+ href="{{ "/customising/fms_and_mapit/" | relative_url }}">How FixMyStreet uses MapIt</a>.
+ </p>
+ </dd>
+ <dt>
+ User wants to unsubscribe from local alerts
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ Alerts are sent as emails: there's an unsubscribe link at the foot of
+ each one, so usually you just need to point this out politely.
+ <!-- TODO should be able to unsubscribe them in the admin -->
+ </p>
+ </dd>
+ <dt>
+ User just wants to send praise or thanks
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ It's nice to hear! mySociety's FixMyStreet administrator shares these
+ with the team and will always write back to the user to thank them.
+ </p>
+ </dd>
+ <dt>
+ The maps are out of date because there's been new development in the
+ user's area
+ </dt>
+ <dd>
+ <p>
+ Your FixMyStreet installation will normally be using maps from an
+ external source &mdash; by default this is <a href="{{ "/glossary/#openstreetmap" | relative_url }}"
+ class="glossary__link">OpenStreetMap</a>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the UK FixMyStreet, we use maps produced by the government (Ordnance
+ Survey), and we advise our users to contact them with any errors. Other
+ installations use custom maps too, so the remedy to this problem will be
+ different in different locations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ OpenStreetMap is an editable project, so it is possible to encourage
+ users &mdash; or your own team &mdash; to update the map information. It will take
+ a while for the map tiles to update, so these changes might not appear
+ on your own site immediately.
+ </p>
+ </dd>
+</dl>
+<div class="attention-box helpful-hint">
+ <p>
+ A tip from Myf, who looks after the UK FixMyStreet site:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ “User Support got much quicker for me once I assembled a spreadsheet with
+ the responses to all our most common questions and enquiries - it took a
+ while to put together (because I was learning the ropes) but once it was
+ done, I could just copy and paste, and I can now send the majority of
+ replies off with just a few modifications.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I'd really recommend that approach. As well as saving me time, it means I
+ can hand user support over to others when needed, for example, when I go
+ on holiday.”
+ </p>
+</div>
+
+## How the site may be abused
+
+Any website that accepts input from the public can attract abuse - but our
+experience from the UK FixMyStreet site is that it's rare. The following
+section discusses some issues you should be aware of.
+
+### Obscene, rude or illegal material
+
+People may occasionally post rude, defamatory or vexatious material. Here's
+our official policy from the UK FixMyStreet site:
+
+<div class="correspondence">
+ FixMyStreet does not moderate reports before they appear on the site, and we
+ are not responsible for the content or accuracy of material submitted by our
+ users. We will remove any problem report containing inappropriate details
+ upon being informed, a process known as reactive moderation. Many sites
+ utilise this process, for example the BBC, as explained here:
+ <a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/help/4180404.stm">http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/help/4180404.stm</a>.
+</div>
+
+If a user gets in touch to complain about a report, it is sometimes because
+they are offended or distressed by the content. Sometimes a report will
+contain their name and address, and may be a top result when they search for
+themselves on Google.
+
+Understandably, they may be upset or angry. Once you have made any necessary
+modifications to the report - or removed it completely - you should reply
+politely and calmly. Tell the user what action you have taken, and let them
+know about the site policy.
+
+It is important to make it clear that the views our users post on FixMyStreet
+are not the views of mySociety.
+
+We don't perform proactive moderation (that is, checking everything *before*
+publishing it on the site) for two reasons.
+
+First, for the quantity of traffic we handle, it would be impractical. Second,
+doing so would make us liable for the content under UK law. You will need to
+check what the law is in your country, and how best to deal with issues such
+as these.
+
+The FixMyStreet code *does* support moderation-before-publication, although
+this is currently only enabled in the Zurich cobrand.
+
+### Spam reports
+
+Many sites which publish user-generated content suffer from spam - that is,
+automated bots posting messages.
+
+On the UK FixMyStreet site, we do not receive many spam reports. Currently it
+is almost entirely prevented by the confirmation link process.
+
+However, we cannot say that this will always be true, and you will need to be
+aware of this possibility.
+
+If your site does start to suffer from spam, please share your experience with
+mySociety and the community, because it's likely that solutions and responses
+to the problem will be useful to everyone.
+
+### Silly or time-wasting reports
+
+Occasionally a user will post a nonsensical report, just for amusement.
+
+Although such things generally seem harmless, remember that, in the age of
+social media, a link to amusing content can spread fast.
+
+In the UK, we've had one memorable case where the comedy report was publicised
+in many media, and was eventually reported on the BBC website.
+
+You may be thinking that it's great publicity for your site, but remember that
+these reports do get sent through to the bodies responsible. FixMyStreet's
+role as a credible source of reports may be undermined if this happens too
+often.
+
+Also, unfortunately, once one silly report has been made, it often gives other
+users the idea to do the same.
+
+Consequently, on the UK FixMyStreet site we have a policy of hiding such
+reports as soon as we are aware of them, to prevent other users being
+encouraged to copy the behaviour.
+
+### Abuse: conclusion
+
+In practice, "problem users" are judged on a one-by-one basis. You can flag a
+user or a report as problematic, and then, if they transgress again, you can
+ban their email address by adding it to the "abuse list". See [managing
+users](/running/users/) for details.
+
+It's a good idea to agree on a policy for dealing with abuse issues, and to
+make sure all your administrators know what it is.
+
+## Software updates
+
+The FixMyStreet platform is under constant development. This means that new
+features and improvements are made from time to time: we announce new releases
+(which have version numbers) on the [fixmystreet.org blog](/blog), and on
+the mailing list (see [more about staying in touch](/community)).
+
+Updating is a technical activity, and you'll need to log into the server's
+"command shell" to do it &mdash; so ask your developer to do this for you if you're
+not confident.
+
+If you've installed FixMyStreet as a git repository cloned from
+[github.com/mysociety/fixmystreet](https://github.com/mysociety/fixmystreet) &mdash;
+which will be the case if you've followed our installation instructions &mdash;
+your developer should find it easy to update. Make sure they know that
+sometimes these updates do require changes to the database schema too (look
+for new migration files in the `db` directory). Always check the version
+release notes (for example, on the blog) because we'll mention such things
+there.
+
+## And finally...
+
+We wish you all the best with your FixMyStreet problem reporting site.
+
+If you're running an installation outside the UK please let us know by
+emailing international&#64;mysociety.org. If you have any questions, don't
+hesitate to <a href="{{ "/community/" | relative_url }}">contact us</a> and we'll get back to you as
+soon as possible with an answer.
+