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Is that really an enforced rule somewhere, or just one of those loose intentions from the early days of domain names?
Artist, writer, comic, hacker, loud voice, and nerd of all trades from New York City.
He/him. 💙💜🩷
All original content I post here is licensed Creative Commons BY-SA 4.0 Int’l.
Is that really an enforced rule somewhere, or just one of those loose intentions from the early days of domain names?
Thank you! This is the link OP should have posted.
The main difference here being if a community has crappy mods you can not only start your own better one, you can start it on another whole server where said crappy mods have no power. Bonus if the server’s general vibe happens to be a better fit for what you want to build.
ProtonDB isn’t a Steam product though, it’s a crowdsourced community effort built and maintained by users. Steam pulling that into their official infrastructure would immediately put a ton of technical stress on the project. It would also be pushing on that boundary between a corporation supporting a community project and drafting all its volunteers as unpaid labor.
“I am altering the deal. Pray I don’t alter it any further.”
Trying to collect the complete set.
A person of culture, I see! 🍃 ▶️▶️▶️▶️▶️▶️🅿️
deleted by creator
That’s right. That person shared this and their username should have been left on it.
In the “look at this foolish person posting something showing how stupid they are” situations that’s the case and it makes sense. In “this person openly posted content you think is good enough to repost but are removing the indicator of their rightful ownership from” situations it’s not cool.
An open post to their socials like this is not a private conversation.
Something I was dearly hoping wouldn’t find its way over here from Reddit: screenshots of posts which erase the posters’ identity for no good reason.
Giving proper credit for content is cool, kids.
On the big wall of TVs at Cyberdelia, the nightclub from Hackers.