The idea is that "roguelike" = a game like Rogue, which according to some people, requires checking most if not all of the boxes including ASCII, proc-gen, perma-death, turn-based, ... while the term "rougelite" is less strict. But I think we're past the point of that distinction being adopted into mainstream.
copygirl
You'd want all of them. The community moderators receiving the report is obvious. The instance admins get notified because all content that goes through their server is copied and stored on them.
Also I heard that if mods take care of the report before their admins see it, the report doesn't go through anymore, to cut down on the amount they have to deal with? Not sure on how that works.
https://github.com/godotengine/godot-docs
This is the source for Godot's documentation. You could clone the repo (in reST format) or download one of the releases (in HTML format) offline, so you wouldn't even need to query anything online.
My uneducated guess is, some threats will burrow themselves in active memory but have no way of persisting beyond a reboot. Or perhaps it just shuts down background software you don't need that could be vulnerable.
Do the admins of that site receive a report if one of their users reports something?
Reports go to four places:
- The community moderators.
- The admins of the instance the community is hosted in. (
lemmy.sdf.org
) - The admins of the instance the reporting user is from. (
discuss.tchncs.de
) - The admins of the instance the reported user is from. (also
lemmy.sdf.org
in this case)
So yeah, the admins of discuss.tchncs.de
acted in this case. Why? I'm not sure.
(cc @qrstuv@lemmy.sdf.org)
Be gay, do crime, y'all!
Scream printing.
The lenses don't have to both be at the same distance to be fair.
Taming animals so you can ride them, or let them pull carriages? Building roads for vehicles? Train tracks with functional trains? Cool airships? All made obsolete with this one-kills-all glider feature! Don't let good game design get in the way of convenience! /s
A lot of contributors of FOSS projects make small changes that aren't copyrightable.
The real question is not what the algorithm pushes to you, but whether their moderation actually bans bigots and removes their posts. Any other instance would lose their "right" to federate with a queer-friendly instance if they didn't do that, so why would Threads get an exception?
Is this not what the "active" sorting does?