Psy Key
@Deserter
It means that the person who reviewed it didn’t believe it was worth further action. At least, that’s my understanding. I base all of that on the question, “What would I do in such a situation?” And, the thing is, I’ve been in a similar situation.
When you have someone come up to you to tell you about something that they believe is an issue and that you should be informed about it, only for you to see it and go, “Well, that’s not really a problem,” or, “Yeah, I knew about that,” it’s a clear example that something is a nonissue to whomever it should be privy to.
One thing I believe the majority of Derpibooru’s staff lacks is communication with it’s members that either break rules or report violations. I’m not saying that they must do this, or they need to listen to me, but what I am saying is that communication does wonders. While I don’t enjoy using anecdotal evidence, my first ban on the site, many years ago, was for posting images of Konata Izumi having sexual relations with Rainbow Dash. I was rightfully banned for a day or so, and I was informed of the rule I broke and why what I did broke a rule.
And you know what happened? I haven’t broken that rule again.
Now, I understand that many of the users on here are not, or were not, as careless and stupid as me to have not read the rules. What I posted is perfectly legal in the US, but not where the servers are located. If I read the rules, this most-likely wouldn’t have happened. If it did, and I was informed like I was about why that breaks a rule, then we sit where we are now being that I’m more than incredibly-likely not going to break that rule again. And I say that because there’s the extremely small chance that it does happen again, for whatever reason. (Because it’s factually false that anything is 100% never going to, or will, happen again. I would be lying by default, based on mathematics.)
In short, I believe communication with our users would be a major benefit. To inform people that break a rule. To inform others that they were correct or not in their report of a violation. Whatever the case may be, letting Derpibooru users knows what’s not working out and what’s good behavior is how you approach a more civil and aware conglomerate.
It means that the person who reviewed it didn’t believe it was worth further action. At least, that’s my understanding. I base all of that on the question, “What would I do in such a situation?” And, the thing is, I’ve been in a similar situation.
When you have someone come up to you to tell you about something that they believe is an issue and that you should be informed about it, only for you to see it and go, “Well, that’s not really a problem,” or, “Yeah, I knew about that,” it’s a clear example that something is a nonissue to whomever it should be privy to.
One thing I believe the majority of Derpibooru’s staff lacks is communication with it’s members that either break rules or report violations. I’m not saying that they must do this, or they need to listen to me, but what I am saying is that communication does wonders. While I don’t enjoy using anecdotal evidence, my first ban on the site, many years ago, was for posting images of Konata Izumi having sexual relations with Rainbow Dash. I was rightfully banned for a day or so, and I was informed of the rule I broke and why what I did broke a rule.
And you know what happened? I haven’t broken that rule again.
Now, I understand that many of the users on here are not, or were not, as careless and stupid as me to have not read the rules. What I posted is perfectly legal in the US, but not where the servers are located. If I read the rules, this most-likely wouldn’t have happened. If it did, and I was informed like I was about why that breaks a rule, then we sit where we are now being that I’m more than incredibly-likely not going to break that rule again. And I say that because there’s the extremely small chance that it does happen again, for whatever reason. (Because it’s factually false that anything is 100% never going to, or will, happen again. I would be lying by default, based on mathematics.)
In short, I believe communication with our users would be a major benefit. To inform people that break a rule. To inform others that they were correct or not in their report of a violation. Whatever the case may be, letting Derpibooru users knows what’s not working out and what’s good behavior is how you approach a more civil and aware conglomerate.