In its shorter, more aggressive form (often cited by regulars): "Rule 53: Do not be lazy. Learn to crack or leave."
Many forums use numbered rules (Rule 1, Rule 2, …). If CS.RIN.RU follows such a scheme, Rule 53 would be a specific, probably niche regulation. Common numbered rules in similar communities often cover:
: When you post an external link on the forum, you assume 100% personal responsibility for what is contained at that destination. If the external site violates forum guidelines, your forum account faces the penalties.
Dropping links to competing commercial projects or unrelated communities without context violates the "promotion of third-party projects" clause of Rule 5.3.
One rainy evening, the forum hosted a live Q&A. Someone asked Mara, now a whisper of legend, how she handled the small violences of online instruction—impatience, sarcasm, the temptation to perform cleverness. Mara typed slowly: “You remember you were once there. You remember how it felt to be taught and to learn by trial. If you respect what broke, you’ll respect the person whose hands tried to fix it.”
In its shorter, more aggressive form (often cited by regulars): "Rule 53: Do not be lazy. Learn to crack or leave."
Many forums use numbered rules (Rule 1, Rule 2, …). If CS.RIN.RU follows such a scheme, Rule 53 would be a specific, probably niche regulation. Common numbered rules in similar communities often cover:
: When you post an external link on the forum, you assume 100% personal responsibility for what is contained at that destination. If the external site violates forum guidelines, your forum account faces the penalties.
Dropping links to competing commercial projects or unrelated communities without context violates the "promotion of third-party projects" clause of Rule 5.3.
One rainy evening, the forum hosted a live Q&A. Someone asked Mara, now a whisper of legend, how she handled the small violences of online instruction—impatience, sarcasm, the temptation to perform cleverness. Mara typed slowly: “You remember you were once there. You remember how it felt to be taught and to learn by trial. If you respect what broke, you’ll respect the person whose hands tried to fix it.”