Recently I came across a person who, on my local Spanish board, was clueless as to why he had been banned. Coincidence or not, the day prior to being banned, he created an OP asking precisely what being banned meant. I gave him a rather thorough explanation, and pointed amongst other thing to the rule set, highlighting aside the obvious top motives for being banned.
As tends to happen, when you try to help out posting a reply, more often than not you find that the OP really didn’t care about the answer at all, but was really concerned with raising his post count as quick as possible, probably without ever going back to review what others has posted as a reply.
The following day, the same guy created an alt account, and started another new thread asking this time why he had been banned, but instead of posting on Meta, he went and posted on my local board. Now I do not know how much language may stand as a barrier in this case (perhaps English is as unknown to him as Klingon), but again he did not follow the rules. As a result, his alt account must have got banned/nuked too, since I cannot find it, not the thread that was created with his alt account.
Specifically, I cannot recall if the message that was sent to him, which he replicated on a post, was in English or Spanish. I do remember though that it did not specify a motive not a timeframe, so I guessed it was permanent.
What I did see in all this process (and many other experiences on the forum) was the following:
-Many do not know that rules exists (yes, their fault, but even so it’s a fact that then affects their behaviour and leads to what it leads to).
-Even if they know that there are some rules, a large segment do not really give a dam about them, nor take a minimum time to comprehend them. Even if you try to help out they often give the answer a pass.
- Local translated rules may not be up to date. I pointed this out to the guy I was on about before, and referenced both the local translated rules and the original rules.
Specifically, my local language post lacks rules 29 to 33 (precisely 33 is what I think caused his pitfall, although I explicitly mentioned this one to him), associated examples, and the guideline for threads is outdated.
This lack of rule synchronicity happens on a few other local translations (German lack a few rules, Portuguese is even more outdated than the Spanish board, Philippine lacks the guideline for threads, etc.).
I guess we can say that the official unofficial lists is mprep’s one, but if there are local translated threads, and we direct people to them due to language barrirers, then they should be up-to-date (the translator of the rules in my local board hasn’t been active for a year now, so the OP is kind of stuck in time there).
- The timeframe is not always clear, at least when it comes to a permanent ban (we can guess it’s permanent when it’s not temporary, but it should be explicit for those not good at guessing).
- The motive is not always informed, regardless of the detail.
- The complete process for appealing, while it is briefly mentioned in the rules, could be explained in further detail in the email that is sent to the banned account (telling them how to document their case properly for revision and so on, and maybe hint that they are barely ever revoked).
imo, specifying the exact ban reason on the notification would only make it worst
whoever gets perma banned, by rules, is not allowed to create another new account
but by knowing the exact banning reason, that user will learn, adapt and create new account
he gets smarter, in a bad sense, then keep doing what he was doing before but with better technique
I do not believe you intended to incentivize ban evasion by creating alts. You were suggestion the obvious that probably goes on quite a lot, not incentivating it to happen, although I consider the arguments to be kind of wrong. The better knowledge on the motives of ban evasion, the more this helps in general, since there is a chance that cases with clear motives become examples and may be taken into account by others (either by word of mouth, or posting appeals with the details).
Even so, it one is thrown into jail, it’s better on many levels to tell them the motives than to obviate telling them.