Cleaning Up The Community


Recommended Posts

Provided you don't get yourself in any further trouble, then you'll be fine. We're not going to go around and start imposing these new restrictions based on old warns. Earn yourself a further warn now, and you could end up finding yourself banned.

I know you were being general for everyone I just want to clarify that I myself am on 0% :p

How can we make the warning system fairer? We post our community rules available for all to read. They're not difficult to follow. What we're saying here is that if you break those rules, then these are the consequences that you can expect.

When it comes to increasing stats, we're trying to improve the quality of our community. By restricting the few that DO cause problems, then it makes things far more pleasant for the majority, who will then hopefully spread the word and bring friends along for the ride.

We're not trying to be Nazi's here, we're trying to be fair, and go to a system where we're open about how we will moderate.

What I meant was that I see rules applied really unevenly, I have reported some posts that have been totally ignored (usually offending posts are removed or edited) yet I have been given warnings for similar things myself, I have also noticed that I once received a threat of a warning for posting to alert people (whom it was obvious where downloading the Windows 7 beta illegally) that the download contained a virus, as the moderator in question at the time (who has since retired) made the assumption that I had downloaded it myself, yet there where literally dozens of people who had admitted it in the thread about the leak, and it was pretty much totally overlooked.

I also believe that on here you get warned for things that on most other forums moderators wouldn't even blink their eyelids at, and I just don't see how restricting members and banning them for stupid things is going to increase the quality of the site, I can understand the need to remove real troublemakers, but I just don't see it as being necessary as the way I see it restricting people's accounts will just annoy them and they will leave. I wasn't trying to call you nazis as such, but I do believe that the moderation on here is still a bit heavy handed compared to what you see on a lot of other message boards.

I'm just about to leave the office, but Frank Fontaine - I'll drop you a PM when I get back home in a while. I'd like to discuss this one further with you if I can, but we can do so privately rather than de-railing a thread!

How can we make the warning system fairer? We post our community rules available for all to read. They're not difficult to follow. What we're saying here is that if you break those rules, then these are the consequences that you can expect.

IMO the rules on copyright infringement and unlicensed software are unclear to the general public. Heck, I find them inconsistent and the only way I've been able to work out what's okay and what isn't was a private discussion with moderators.

Clarifying exactly what rules apply to copyright infringement would be a great idea. Your example of Windows 7 downloads, virus discussion, and warnings is a perfect example of how vague the rules are.

Consolidating the rules in a single easy-to-find place would be nice too.

Forum specific rules are usually stuck at the top of the form. The terms of service (when you create an account) aren't linked from anywhere else (unless you go through the sign-up process again), and the forum rules are in a third place. Then you have posts like this which clarify rules further but may not be seen by a normal member.

Right, because ban evasion is so difficult on forums. :rolleyes:

There's a guy on here right now, that is posting news and threads, and mods are openly joking about him being a person that was banned.

Thing is, that is probably just that, a joke. If the staff knew that someone where a previously banned member, they would be banned again very quickly. To ban someone just because they are similar to a previous member would be grossly unfair, so I can assure you that I doubt that this is anything but a joke :p

IMO the rules on copyright infringement and unlicensed software are unclear to the general public. Heck, I find them inconsistent and the only way I've been able to work out what's okay and what isn't was a private discussion with moderators.

Clarifying exactly what rules apply to copyright infringement would be a great idea. Your example of Windows 7 downloads, virus discussion, and warnings is a perfect example of how vague the rules are.

Consolidating the rules in a single easy-to-find place would be nice too.

Forum specific rules are usually stuck at the top of the form. The terms of service (when you create an account) aren't linked from anywhere else (unless you go through the sign-up process again), and the forum rules are in a third place. Then you have posts like this which clarify rules further but may not be seen by a normal member.

This.

The mods are so inconsistent when it comes to the warnings over it. I've heard & talked to members who were genuinely trying to help someone with a software issue and found themselves with a warning over it. Even after they've tried to explain the situation. That's why you guys end up with the Nazi name and deservedly so in some cases.

I agree, I've not exactly been a role model in the GH at times and it's quite sad when I think back about it especially after spilling my guts in this topic and the fact that the people I've fought with I actually refer to as good "internet friends", one of them could and should almost be a real life friend.

I'm not trying to excuse my past behaviour with that topic above but I have generally struggled with things the past few years that have caused me to act irrationally and find outlets other than opening up to take out frustration/anger and everything else. Those are personal matters though, this is a tech board, I'm expected to and should keep the two separate.

Right now I'm sitting on a 100% warn and the amount of leeway I've been given is incredible, you members should know that not to be nosey but to know the mods do try their best not to ban people they can still see some worth in.

It's a terribly hard job, I do think things are inconsistent from time to time but all you need to do is talk to supervisors, there's a chain of command for a reason, it's not to demean the Gmods, it's to give them advice or a second opinion from someone who's maybe been around longer or has more experience, that's all. If you can't politely sort out what you think is a difference with a Gmod go to a Supevisor, ultimately if they agree with the Gmod suck it up, very rarely around here do you get warned for things that don't at least require a slap on the wrist. At the end of the day you're a visitor to this community, it's "their" community and "their" rules, tough luck if you don't agree with something that's specifically covered in the rules - No other way to put this really, we all just own a "license" to be part of Neowin, we break terms and we can lose that license. Just like your drivers license for example for driving ****ed 3 times in a row or something.

The Gamers Hangout while still being one of the largest sections of the board always has this past history of being quite hostile and hopefully that can change for 2010 (Y) The mods know we like to have jokes at each others expenses, but guys, they know us well enough to know when the jokes aren't really jokes, they're degrading the board and/or each other.

Here's to 2010, and FTR I am starting to get a lot better on my meds, which is good for you guys cause I've unfortunately (as you can see from warning), been someone stuck in the middle of a lot of moderating matters in the GH.

Edited by Audioboxer

People calling the mods Nazis are pathetic and unable to control themselves. I was a mod for how long and went through a lot of crap from the same people who sat here and chastised me as being an ******* and Nazi and whatever other name they felt throwing my way. Honestly, besides the ridiculously vague copyright rules, every thing else is as clear as day.

It reminds me of the scene from "Liar, Liar" when Carey's character is having a break down and a former client calls about being arrested again and Carey just picks up the phone and yells "stop breaking the law, *******!'

I agree with evn. - clarifications on some rules are needed. Take this thread as an example: https://www.neowin.net/forum/index.php?showtopic=861846

I know OSx86 discussion is allowed, but: Is linking to software which lets you install OS X in VMware (thus violating the Apple EULA) allowed? And this is just one example.

Thing is, that is probably just that, a joke. If the staff knew that someone where a previously banned member, they would be banned again very quickly. To ban someone just because they are similar to a previous member would be grossly unfair, so I can assure you that I doubt that this is anything but a joke :p

Look up Cy-kill.

To me a 100% warn should have always meant a ban. It seems kind of obvious to me... I'm very surprised to find that some well know members have 100% warn. I very much doubt these people will get the additional warn it would require to ban them though, not because they change their behaviour but I suspect the mods will simply become less willing to give out warns given that they now actually do something...

This.

The mods are so inconsistent when it comes to the warnings over it. I've heard & talked to members who were genuinely trying to help someone with a software issue and found themselves with a warning over it. Even after they've tried to explain the situation. That's why you guys end up with the Nazi name and deservedly so in some cases.

maybe for things like copyright infringement, i think it needs some hard and fast rules... links to pirated material would be obvious, but i think it should stop at specific keywords which can be put in a search engine to bring up pirated stuff... let them get away with vague things, they arent useful for finding anything useful anyway

maybe for things like copyright infringement, i think it needs some hard and fast rules... links to pirated material would be obvious, but i think it should stop at specific keywords which can be put in a search engine to bring up pirated stuff... let them get away with vague things, they arent useful for finding anything useful anyway

Without going into detail or naming the member (because the person told me in confidence) they only helped someone with a codec issue they were having and they genuinely had no idea it was illegal to post it because it's included in so many codec packs and freely talked about any other time on Neowin. I mean, does someone deserve a warn/ban for mentioning a codec pack? No chance, but that's pretty much what this member was faced with. Just like you shouldn't be warned or banned for mentioning Blacksn0w.

Thank god Neowin removed the mod that warned him. One of the worst decisions the staff made "hiring" him.

Hazy on the details because it was quite a while ago. However I can think of many more examples from the GH where the mods warned someone over nothing. Especially with the history in that subsection - I've seen members get away with a lot worse. Even I've had a slap on the wrist over worse from DirtyLarry. So when you do hear of a warning being handed out over these situations it just shows the whole lack of communication / inconsistencies the staff have.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Microsoft is reportedly seeking help from its biggest cloud rival, Amazon Web Services, to address mounting capacity issues of GitHub. According to a report by Business Insider, this move of the company comes after a series of AI-driven outages on the coding platform, which Microsoft acquired in 2018. Despites its plans to migrate GitHub completely to Azure by 2027, increasing demand from AI coding tools has forced Microsoft to adopt a multi-cloud strategy............... https://cio.economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/corporate-news/microsoft-taps-aws-for-github-capacity-amid-ai-driven-outages-and-multi-cloud-strategy/131761981  
    • Zero tolerance for antisemitic social media posts. Thousands of arrests and fines.
    • It's not about the kids, it's about de-anonymizing the entire internet to punish people for wrongthink. The only way to ban kids, is to demand ID from everyone, a digital ID if you will.
    • QuickView 6.8.1 by Razvan Serea QuickView is the fastest image viewer for Windows, designed to open all your photos instantly. It supports popular formats like WebP, AVIF, JPEG XL, PNG, JPEG, TIFF, RAW, and PSD, making it perfect for photographers, designers, and everyday users. With lightning-fast load times and zero-lag previews, QuickView handles everything from small icons to massive 8K images effortlessly. Drag and drop files to view them instantly, zoom and pan smoothly, and enjoy a clutter-free interface built for speed and simplicity. QuickView also makes managing and analyzing images easy. You can preview thousands of photos instantly, view real-time color and brightness, and check image details without slowing down your computer. It automatically fixes common file issues and works perfectly offline, so your images stay private. QuickView supports multiple languages, is portable, and requires no installation. QuickView key features: Blazing Fast Loading – Open images instantly with zero lag. Modern Format Support – View WebP, AVIF, JPEG XL, and more. RAW File Ready – Handle photos from all major cameras effortlessly. Classic Format Friendly – Supports PSD, PNG, JPEG, TIFF, and BMP. Drag-and-Drop Convenience – Open files instantly without menus. Multilingual Interface – Works in English, Chinese, Japanese, German, Spanish, and Russian. Portable & Lightweight – Single executable, no installation required. Mass Image Preview – Instantly view thousands of images with HUD Photo Wall. Real-Time Color Tools – RGB histograms and color analysis overlays. Accurate Metadata – View EXIF and file information instantly. Smart File Fixes – Automatically repair incorrectly saved files. Fast or Full-Quality Toggle – One-click RAW preview adjustment. Smooth Navigation – Zoom, pan, and scroll without slowdowns. Privacy Focused – Fully offline operation keeps your images secure. QuickView 6.8.1 release notes: Dynamic Island, Filmstrip Gallery, Custom Hotkeys & Size Optimization QuickView v6.8.1 introduces redesigned window controls, an interactive filmstrip gallery, dual-mode slideshows, fully customizable hotkeys, and substantial binary size optimizations. Changelog: Floating 'Dynamic Island' Window Controls The window controls have been redesigned for a cleaner interface. Floating Capsule Pill (#199): Replaces traditional window controls with a floating pill-shaped widget in the top-right corner. Includes hover glow transitions. Compact Size: Reduced the size of caption buttons to maximize screen space for images. Interactive Filmstrip Gallery The filmstrip gallery has been redesigned with improved controls and animations. Top-Hover Trigger: Hover near the top edge to expand the filmstrip gallery. The trigger mode can be set to Hover, Pinned, or Disabled via the Settings menu. Auto-Centering Scroll: Selecting a thumbnail triggers a smooth scrolling animation that aligns the item to the center of the bar. Visual Refinements: Corrected visual gaps when pinned, fixed zoom anchor offsets, and restored smooth horizontal auto-scrolling. Dual-Mode Slideshow Spotlight Mode: Added a slideshow mode inspired by Picasa Spotlight, which dims the background and focuses on the active image. Normal Mode: Standard fullscreen slideshow functionality. Fully Customizable Hotkeys Custom Keyboard Mapping: Added support for completely customizing and rebinding all core keyboard shortcuts and navigation hotkeys directly within the Settings menu. UI/UX Adjustments & Window Snapping Magnetic Snapping (#90): Window borders now snap to screen edges (100% magnetic snap) when resized. Responsive Toolbar (#194): Toolbar buttons automatically hide based on the window width and active mode. Timeline Scrubbing: Implemented debounced asynchronous seeking for animated formats, providing smooth scrubbing without timeline lag. Fixed frame count and distortion issues on large GIF seeking (#197). Extended Mouse Mapping (#191): Added support for mapping multi-function mouse side buttons in settings. Archive Sorting (#193): Added an option to always sort archives by name ascending. Footprint Compression & Size Optimizations Reduced the binary size of the standalone executable by removing redundant templates and dependencies. C++ Stream Elimination: Removed dependencies, saving approximately 18.5 KB. Localization Deduplication: Consolidated localization string tables, saving 10.5 KB by preventing template duplication. Vector Icon Compression: Compressed static vector icon coordinates to 16-bit integers, saving 54 KB. Code Devirtualization: Replaced std::function callbacks with C-style function pointers and devirtualized core controllers to reduce overhead. LTO Debug Fix: Removed obsolete compiler flags (/MERGE:.rdata=.text) from Link-Time Optimization (LTO) builds to fix minidump crash debugging. Decoding & Memory Fixes Hybrid Allocation: Implemented a hybrid memory allocator to balance preloading and tile rendering. Access Violations: Fixed crashes when rapidly switching images. HDR in Archives: Resolved an issue where HDR images decoded from ZIP/RAR archives lost their peak luminance metadata or failed to render in float format. WebP, AVIF & JXL (#195): Fixed shadow transparency glitches in WebP/AVIF and image distortion in JPEG XL. Download: QuickView 64-bit | Portable 64-bit | ~5.0 MB (Open Source) Download: QuickView ARM64 | Portable ARM64 View: QuickView Website | Github | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
  • Recent Achievements

    • Conversation Starter
      NovaEdgeX earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • One Year In
      Console General earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Year In
      Twozo Technologies earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Month Later
      Twozo Technologies earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Twozo Technologies earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      520
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      186
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      107
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      87
    5. 5
      ATLien_0
      67
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!