@tripleee I suggested a few edits on gamedev.stackexchange.com. My sock has 11 rep on that website... So if I get 20 I should be able to connect to SE right?
@SmokeDetector tpu- Almost certainly spam: This is irrelevant to the question (it's advertising cloud hosting, not on your own hardware) and the domain has a history of spam.
re: last report - OP has edited out the profanity, I don't think this was an attempt to post purely abusive content. Y'all might want to consider retracting flags, as the content is no longer offensive
@VictorVosMottor for example, watching that as CDqhfyHPOXU(?# YouTube video) would be clearer and not require a metasmoke search to understand what it's targeting
@Ollie That pattern looks like it's already caught by Potentially bad keyword in body and Potentially bad keyword in answer; append -force if you really want to do that.
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Few unique characters in answer, mostly punctuation marks in answer, repeating characters in answer (204): Почему Йорк а не Ёрк? by йощь on russian.SE
@CodyGray If I'm understanding what your issue is, you are saying that you are able to use FIRE here in Charcoal HQ (and any appropriate room on chat.SE), but are having issues getting it working in rooms on chat.SO (e.g. SOCVR). If so, you can try following the procedure:
To copy FIRE's settings from chat.SE to chat.SO:
5
1. In Charcoal HQ, enter the following into the browser console for the tab:
2. Copy the entirety of the output from that command and paste it into the browser console for a tab in chat.SO (e.g. SOCVR). Then reload all tabs on chat.SO that are using FIRE. This will overwrite the FIRE settings on chat.SO with the FIRE settings on chat.SE. If you also paste the same console output into a tab on chat.MSE, you'll have the same FIRE settings on all three chat servers.
The first bisect is translated to "tiptoe" and the second one was "chicks". The first is super harmless, the second is slang for a woman. While not necessarily "proper," I wouldn't find it offensive. @Vic is this typically used offensively in russian?