On October 26, 2025 1:22:58 AM PDT, secretsnail9 via agora-discussion <[email protected]> wrote: >This seems like it contradicts the guidelines for obfuscation provided in >CFJ 3747: > >First, a reasonable Agoran reading the message must, at a >glance, be able to understand the gist of the dependent action being >announced. The rationale for this rule is that it is unreasonable to >expect that player will pay attention to an announcement unless e has >enough information to decide whether it is relevant to em. However, >the details of the action may require more thought, just so long they >remain easy to understand (I'd say anything that requires the average >Agoran more than 30-60 seconds is probably out). > > > >The first requirement is met in that just squinting at the encoded intent >is enough to "get the gist" of which dependent action is being done. If >some letters were replaced with random characters, for instance, it would >be harder to understand, but this case is more similar to a typo, or the >Transposed Letter Effect, which would likely be equally readable barring >additional confounding factors. > >The second requirement is also met in that the "decoding" process is very >simple (3 and E look very similar, as do I and 1, A and 4, O and 0) and can >be deduced with the context clues as the replacement is consistent across >each word. > >That combined with there being no other "reasonable" interpretation of the >text means it is NOT "obscure, unclear, or unintelligible" as would be >required for obfuscation to be present. At the very least, it meets the >R478 standard, being reasonably unambiguous in meaning. (There is also a >bit of background on what "reasonable" means in Agora that would be >relevant to this case, as evidenced by the lack of its presence in the >quote the judgement provided when it is an important part of the >requirement, "reasonably clearly and unambiguously".) > > > >> That some readers >> decoded the meaning or even objected is irrelevant because the test is >> objective and attaches to the text itself, not anyone's comprehension of >> it. The community interest is also served by not opening the door to >> encoded text being used to table an intent or perform by-announcement acts. >> > >If you can tell what the "encoded" text means at a glance, i think the >community will be fine and perhaps even benefit from the flexibility of >allowing it. Full-on ciphers can still be disallowed while allowing "codes" >that only take a few seconds to parse. > >I suggest you self-file a Motion to Reconsider this judgement, though I'd >like to hear if anyone else agrees or disagrees with these arguments. > >-- >snail >Steampunk Hat I agree with these arguments entirely. I believe that a reasonable agoran coule read the text as it was intended to be read without even needing to decode - it just looks like the text.
Re: DIS: Re: BUS: (@Arbitor) Re: Bus: \
Automaticat via agora-discussion Sun, 26 Oct 2025 09:26:39 -0700
- DIS: Re: BUS: (@Arbitor) Re: Bus: \ EarlyRetirement via agora-discussion
- Re: DIS: Re: BUS: (@Arbitor) Re:... ais523 via agora-discussion
- Re: DIS: Re: BUS: (@Arbitor)... EarlyRetirement via agora-discussion
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- Re: DIS: Re: BUS: (@Arbitor)... Automaticat via agora-discussion
- Re: DIS: Re: BUS: (@Arbi... ais523 via agora-discussion
- Re: DIS: Re: BUS: (@Arbitor)... juan via agora-discussion
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