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United States hadez berlin.eu.austirc.net Sat, 06:37:00 AM
United States scrawl34 irc.rootirc.net Sat, 06:36:00 AM
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Australia factor-g perth.wa.au.austirc.net Sat, 06:23:00 AM
Tunisia Criptex london.eu.austirc.net Sat, 06:11:00 AM
 Current Network Stats
Users: 193
Chans: 59
Daily Users: 196
Servers: 18
Opers: 3
Reg Nicks: 356
Reg Chans: 63
Unknown: 41/46
United States: 33/47
Australia: 26/38
Sweden: 14/23
Netherlands: 10/17
United Kingdom: 9/16
France: 8/11

AustIRC Code of Conduct

Network Charter

As with any system involving both freedom and power, abuse is an issue on any IRC network. AustIRC Network is no exception, but we try our hardest to screen and train our IRCops, and to ensure a system for reporting and handling abuse is in place.

In order to promote a safe and abuse-free environment, users and operators alike are bound by the AustIRC network rules, as shown below.

Any user, operator, or autonomous agent connected to the AustIRC network agrees:

  1. not to threaten or carry out threats against any other user on the network.
  2. not to flood, attempt to take over, or otherwise interfere with the operation of a channel or the network in a malicious way.
  3. not to spam or display unsolicited advertisements.
  4. not to use open proxies when connecting.
  5. not to place Trojan clients (Sub7 bots, etc.) or other hostile bots on our network.
  6. not to allow bots under your control to break any of these rules.
  7. not to ask to become an IRC Operator.
We do not automatically monitor the content of conversation or file transfer in order to enforce these policies, however if we become aware of breaches of our policy then we will take action. Repetitive abuse will also be reported to the offender's ISP when deemed appropriate.

Network staff may disconnect any user in violation of the above rules, without warning. If you feel you have been wrongfully disconnected, please contact the abuse team, either via email or #help. Any issues with the abuse team should be reported directly to a Senior Staff, who will deal with the matter.

Abuse Team Charter

AustIRC Network recognizes the potential for abuse in any situation involving power over other users. It is the duty of the AustIRC Abuse Team to oversee the activities of all IRC operators and server administrators, and to take corrective action when necessary. The Abuse Team reports directly to the network administrator.

The Abuse Team maintains the following list of IRC operator rules:

  1. IRCops will not harass or abuse other users.
  2. IRCops will not interfere with channel operation (see below).
  3. IRCops will NEVER give out IP addresses or DNS names of users.
  4. IRCops will never kill a user to "show off".
  1. You must always respond to requests for help while oper'd and not set /away.
  2. If you are too busy, direct them to #help.
  3. Make sure you are not invisible (umode +i) whilst opered.
  4. You do not have to take abuse from users, but by the same token you may not at any point use your o-line or increased services access to exact revenge.
  5. As a global IRC Operator you should familiarise yourself with the proper routing of servers, in order to help the network recover from splits.
  6. In network-owned channels you will not abuse users in any way. Abusive users will be banned and you will be expected to /ignore them.

The last rule is of particular importance. Remember, "IRCop" means "IRC operator", not "IRC cop". Dealing with channel issues is not an IRCop's job. When a user begins evading channel bans, it becomes a network issue. Remember, use channel powers for channel problems.

The procedure for handling abuse is as follows:

  1. On the first offence, the IRCop is given a warning by the Abuse Team.
  2. A second offence against a different user results in another warning. If against the same user, there is no second warning.
  3. On a second offence against the same user or a third total offence, the IRCop temporarily loses the privilege of /oper for a period of 3 days.
  4. After the 3 day period, the IRCop is on 1 week probation. If a violation occurs during the probation period, then that operator's O: line is removed.

Some notes about the abuse policy:

Routing Team Charter

The AustIRC routing team is a group dedicated to ensuring the continual flow of messages through the AustIRC network. In a sense, we are the network repairmen, fixing links when they break.

Routing team members receive higher privileges than most AustIRC operators (necessary for jumping around servers while monitoring and repairing the network). As such, they have a greater responsibility to the network and its users.

All routing decisions are made in public (#opers) by all members of the Routing team. If an urgent decision is required, only the current members of the routing team need to vote.

A member of AustIRC routing (or any other operator for that matter) must never create a netsplit for personal reasons (i.e. showing off).

Services Team Charter

IRC services vary widely across the different IRC networks. AustIRC employs the more common Anope-style services, which include NickServ, ChanServ, HostServ, MemoServ, BotServ, and the less-widely-known OperServ. The goal of the services team is to ensure the continual uptime of AustIRC services, and to prevent/deal with services abuse.

As with routing, services team members have increased power over IRC activities and hence have a greater responsibility to AustIRC. The following actions are UNACCEPTABLE from Services Team Members:



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> What does ELF stand for (in respect to Linux?) ELF is the first rock group that Ronnie James Dio performed with back in the early 1970's. In constrast, a.out is a misspelling of the French word for the month of August. What the two have in common is beyond me, but Linux users seem to use the two words together. -- seen on c.o.l.misc
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