^Points to Tricky Boy
Yep, that's the one I meant! :)
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^Points to Tricky Boy
Yep, that's the one I meant! :)
Ok, so now we know he's a hot babe. Now we just need to prove he's a trap.
Well from what ive read the Evony Team do not care that you are basicly insulting the Rep's and are all making a joke about it. Can I just inform you that Rep's should be taking note of this and develop further into this to make the Rep team more stronger in ways people will be thankful etc.
Regards,
Shox
well you didn't get banned.....instead they decided to edit almost your entire post so that you couldn't be right in any way:mad:
they didn't ban you couse then you would be right and they won'tt let people see the truth:mad::mad:
hopefully enough people would have seen the poste before they changed it.....hopefully.
although the fact they editted it does meen that there is something there they didn't want us seeing;)
Your right. They edited the post to remove the reasons why people were banned in the instances that he specifically quoted.
It is against policy that users and mods are not allowed to publicly discuss why someone was banned.
I love how people are making it sound like it's some huge conspiracy...
Also the fact where it should be Freedom of Speech has just been proven wrong onto Evony due to the fact of this post almost entirely being editted.
Read my last post....
This is the internet. This website has terms of use, policies and rules.
Just like the military, once you sign your name and accept the contract, your rights go out the window and replaced by what you can and cannot do.
"Freedom of Speech" is not a right on Private Websites
27 Jan 2008, 15:35
There are apparently some people who have deluded themselves into thinking first-amendment rights, freedom of speech, or whatever you want to call it applies anywhere and everywhere. Funnily enough, they claim this to the detriment and ignoring of other laws, such as those about slander for example.
Freedom of Speech does not apply on private property.
Let's see some real world examples of this first. While the examples are U.S.-centric, so is the first amendment, but this applies regardless of what country you're coming from. The net is not limited by country boundaries.
(1) Public schools are prohibited from promoting a specific religious belief, prayer in schools, etc. If you attempt to walk in a public school and teach Christianity, you'll be escorted off the property, most likely by police. You do not have the right to "freedom of speech" in that situation because other rules prohibit it.
(2) You cannot enter a private business and talk to employees trying to recruit them for your business instead. Again, you'll be escorted off the premises by security. You do not have that "right to freedom of speech" in that situation because it's private property. The owners of that property decide what's allowed.
(3) You cannot enter a Baptist church on a Sunday morning, take over the pulpit and teach the virtues of Scientology. It's private property as well.
Ooops, and that's just the tip of the iceberg. What's in common? They're all "not your property", and as such what you can do and even say on that property is limited to the rules or what the owner allows on that property.
The same thing applies to internet "private property".
You, as an individual, can create your own website, and do or write as you wish on it. It's your site. The law will deal with you if you should violate a law during your "free speech". (Remember, kids, slander of other people is not protected by freedom of speech in any country.)
When you create that site, it's your "private property". You have the right to block anyone and everyone from posting on it. You can delete anything you disagree with. It's your site, those posters are guests, and as such they are limited to what you allow on your site.
As that applies to you on your privately-owned website, so it applies to privately-owned websites that are not yours.
And every site is privately owned. Be it by a person, a university, or a corporation, it's still privately owned. What can and can't be done on that privately owned site is determined solely by the owner.
Which is why almost every website has some form of rules, or Terms of Service, which you are required to read and agree to before attempting to post anything on said site.
The forum gets to be unfun when people try to drag real world policies and laws onto the forum.
Just make fun of everyone, that's usually a good MO.