User talk:Brandon Rhea

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Response
I don't see how the first example could be bad at all. I didn't say he was incredibly shitty but I said the image was. The third one was an example of him vandalizing pages after it was decided not to use internal wiki links like that. Do you have any more to show me? I can't remember everything that I have said. Also you linked to the TOS but the TOS doesn't say anything about assuming good faith. In fact the only thing that the 2nd one and the 4th ones could break is only the first and 2nd rules. Which are technically the same rule since they both mention the same things. SeaTerror (talk) 23:42, July 22, 2012 (UTC)


 * I didn’t say that assume good faith was in the Terms of Use, I said it was a fundamental wiki philosophy. Because of the types of editing tools available to users and the kind of medium a wiki is, wikis don't work well if people aren't assuming good faith. What is in the Terms of Use, however, is that you are not to abuse, harass, or intimidate others, and that you are not to post or say things that are obscene or offensive. Many of your comments fall under those headings. Other examples of this behavior includes you calling someone stupid and saying an admin is a dickhead. Please do not engage in this type of behavior moving forward. Thank you. - Brandon Rhea (talk) 23:49, July 22, 2012 (UTC)

Well first can we paint a clear picture of which is what? I assume the comments fall under only abusive. Something being offensive is incredibly subjective. I've seen people get offended by just somebody saying the word "ass" before. SeaTerror (talk) 00:05, July 23, 2012 (UTC)
 * If you want concrete terms, I'd go with abusive and harassing, as well as intimidating (even if it wasn't your intent, it was pretty intimidating). Offensive is in our Terms of Use, and I agree that it's subjective, but people are going to be offended by being called stupid or other forms of name-calling. Those are things you need to avoid. - Brandon Rhea (talk)  00:09, July 23, 2012 (UTC)