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On 11/11/2023 at 3:25 PM, Gurken Khan said:

Is our nannybot still on? Haven't seen it in action for a long time.

No, it's not. Defc0n decided to shut down GenieBot, and ModerationBot no longer responds to profanity because auto-unmuting isn't working. I think that a substantial portion of the moderation bots will need to be changed in order to fix it in a reliable manner. It's on the todo list, and that list is long. We can use more volunteers to help with development work. Today I talked to noogler on IRC, who knows Python, C++, JavaScript and Java. He's interested in contributing. Hooray! Good thing I'm in the habit of having notifications enabled on IRC and actually responding to people there.

In the meantime, lobby helpers are watching chat history occasionally and muting people when infractions are excessive. Please ping us for a quicker response to infractions.

Edited by Norse_Harold
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2 minutes ago, Lion.Kanzen said:

Screenshot_20240129-180958.png.15add22b496fb3023229813980edc689.png

 

About Dwarf seller

The Roman Empire actually imported dwarves from around its territories to fight them in dwarf "battles" in the Colosseum's games (circa 100 AD). The Roman crowds apparently thought that was pretty funny, and it provided comic relief from all the real killing, so the officials running the Colosseum would base specialty acts around dwarves/midgets boxing each other, and would similarly showcase other 'foreign oddities' (ex. supposed Amazons) collected from around the empire.

 

 

 

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7 minutes ago, Lion.Kanzen said:

Screenshot_20240129-180958.png.15add22b496fb3023229813980edc689.png

Urine Tax Collector

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pecunia_non_olet

A tax on the disposal of urine, an important ingredient to the Roman chemical industry, was first imposed by Emperor Nero under the name of vectigal urinae in the 1st century AD. The tax was removed after a while, but Vespasian re-enacted it around 70 AD in order to fill the treasury.[2]

 

Vespasian imposed a urine tax on the distribution of urine from Rome's public urinals (the Roman lower classes urinated into pots, which were later emptied into cesspools). The urine collected from these public urinals was sold as an ingredient for several chemical processes. It was used in tanning, wool production, and also by launderers as a source of ammonia to clean and whiten woollen togas. The buyers of the urine paid the tax.

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