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Krulltopia announced a ban on sight policy for RMB adspam. The moderators apparently say this is illegal. See http://forum.nationstates.net/viewtopic.php?f=12&t=54465
99% of adspammers would have zero influence. Not as in nearly zero but actually zip squat zilch zero.I have no problem with this, except that I am concerned that the delegate might use up valuable influence banning adspammers, leaving him vulnerable and unable to ban a genuine threat to the region. Remember, NK only has minnow influence.
That being said, most adspammers would have so little influence that banjecting them would have little effect.
That does, however, involve more work by the recruiter. The RMB recruiters tend to be lazy.I do wonder at the effectiveness of the Pacific's policy. If I were a recruiter I would just create a disposable puppet every time I wanted to recruit.
TNP is a feeder, and a free region, but at the same time it is our region, not theirs. They are not there to help our region, or contribute to it in any way. So why should we bend to their wishes?I disagree. It seems a bit too despotic to ban recruiters on site. It is a feeder and therefore a free region?
I just think that we appear to have a spam problem because we the residents make so little use of our lovely RMB. I have watched the East Pacific and they do not have this problem so much because they all actively post on their RMB.
Overly long adverts aren't right though and maybe the delegate could just ban those.
We have no reason to bend to their wishes. I just think it would be entertaining to make them tapdanceTNP is a feeder, and a free region, but at the same time it is our region, not theirs. They are not there to help our region, or contribute to it in any way. So why should we bend to their wishes?I disagree. It seems a bit too despotic to ban recruiters on site. It is a feeder and therefore a free region?
I just think that we appear to have a spam problem because we the residents make so little use of our lovely RMB. I have watched the East Pacific and they do not have this problem so much because they all actively post on their RMB.
Overly long adverts aren't right though and maybe the delegate could just ban those.
Let them eat BBQ.
Indeed, I have no idea how the mods could rule this as illegal.If the mechanics of the game allow the nations to be ejected then it is not a violation of the rules.
I just think that we appear to have a spam problem because we the residents make so little use of our lovely RMB. I have watched the East Pacific and they do not have this problem so much because they all actively post on their RMB.
Reploid Productions:Since people still seem to be getting confused about the exact legality of this player-imposed ban, let's get it spelled out crystal clear here.
The delegate of a feeder can attempt to ban recruiting posts from the region. Not sure how much luck they'll have at it, but they can certainly try. Between the disposable nature of most recruiter nations and the cap on the banlist though, I can't help but see the effort as tilting at windmills.
The moderators will not assist in enforcing this ban. If a recruiter, or group of recruiters rotates through multiple puppets to keep posting their allowed once-per-24-hours recruitment post, it's all on the delegate to try and keep them out.
Nothing is stopping recruiters from getting clever and finding ways around this player-made ban. Sleeper puppets could easily idle in a feeder or act as locals until they post a recruiting message, at which point they will cost at least some influence to banject. For that matter, nothing is stopping invaders from using such tactics to try and lure a feeder delegate into wasting more influence. I would honestly be surprised if this hasn't already started happening.
RE: Quoting an ad verbatim: This is a tricky grey area. There may be times where quoting part of an ad is relevant to the discussion. If you think it's being done simply to subvert the once-per-24 hours rule, report it and we'll take a look. We're leery about blanket-banning the action of quoting an ad, as there may be legitimate reasons to do so in conversation. I personally would advise people NOT to quote an entire ad and thus avoid running the risk of being looked at as skirting the rules in the first place.