NationStates Jolt Archive


Griefing?

Infierno de Dante
09-06-2004, 22:16
How many nations need to be ejected before it is considered griefing?
Crazy girl
09-06-2004, 22:31
that depends entirely on the situation..
Unfree People
09-06-2004, 22:52
lol, astue answer, cg ;)

well, she's right. if the delegate is an invader, even one ejection without an immediate unbanning is griefing. if the delegate is a native with native endorsements, then it can get away with a good number of ejections legally (forty percent is the usual line not to cross, but even that isn't set in stone).
Hatake Kakashi
09-06-2004, 22:56
lol, astue answer, cg ;)

well, she's right. if the delegate is an invader, even one ejection without an immediate unbanning is griefing. if the delegate is a native with native endorsements, then it can get away with a good number of ejections legally (forty percent is the usual line not to cross, but even that isn't set in stone).
And so after ejecting the nations, can we place a password on the region?
Unfree People
09-06-2004, 23:01
Are you invader delegates or not?

If yes - then you may place a password but you have to give it to all the natives of the region, including those you eject and unban.
If no - yes, passwords are fine and you aren't obligated to give it to anyone.
Tactical Grace
09-06-2004, 23:05
Regions can only be passworded by invaders if the password is immediately telegrammed to all nations within the region and those ejected from it, and all those nations are informed of any subsequent changes of the password. The region ban list must also be cleared immediately. Also, ejecting 40% of all nations in the region is likely to be considered a griefing. To be on the safe side, stick to tactical kicks of key UN nations only. There should be no need to eject a large proportion of any region's native residents.

And as we always say, play nice.

Tactical Grace
Forum Moderator
Unfree People
09-06-2004, 23:17
if the delegate is a native with native endorsements, then it can get away with a good number of ejections legally (forty percent is the usual line not to cross, but even that isn't set in stone). The forty percent thing holds for native delegates, no?