Rules... rules... rules. We hate rules and don't want anything to do with them.
Still, some people need things explained more than others do.
Here is the summarised version of our rules: This is our house. You
are guests. Don't crap on the sofa or we will ask you to leave. We personally
wouldn't crap on your sofa in your house. Apart from that, make yourself
at home.
Everything that follows is an elaboration of the above. Feel free to
read on, but if you grok the above bit, then you'll do OK.
Clever banter, fine humour and a sharp wit are good things.
Impassioned argument and/or savage hostility is fine, as long as it
is articulate and makes good reading. We love a good flame war. We hate
a crap one.
You are most welcome to post anything about pretty well anything.
But please observe the categories and post under the appropriate headings.
If you post stuff about politics in the bike gear section, then people
will think you're an idiot incapable of following simple instructions.
And you're not one of them, are you? And don't put up pictures of naked
people or mpegs of people torturing dumb animals. We're a motorcycle
forum.
Respect the opinions of others, and expect the same in return.
Notice that respect does not necessarily mean "agree with". Respecting
an opinion you disagree with means either being willing to argue about
it coherently, or being willing to quietly let it go. The BIKE ME! team
disagree on many things, but we handle it like adults. Sulking, pouting,
and being huffy are simply embarrassing, and you will be laughed at.
And not in a nice way.
Don't come here for the sole purpose of trying to push an agenda.
By all means express your outrage at anything that annoys you. But
much like the pub, we don't tolerate anyone walking in, making a dramatic
statement and then storming off in a huff. We treat such cowardice with
contempt.
Thou shalt not "post-whore".
See our tirade on "post-whoring" below, which explains what it means
(or at least our definition of it), and why it annoys us. Prolific posting
and "post-whoring" are not the same thing.
Don't threaten people.
It's against the law. You can argue, question their ancestry or offer
to meet your protagonist in the car park, but don't make direct threats.
For example, you can say: "Mate, you're an idiot and I hope you get
cancer of the arse and die in your own waste!" But don't say: "I'm coming
to get you, bastard. I'm gonna kill you/burn down your house/put a hot
slug in your face!" See the difference?
Don't worry about screwing up.
If you did something stupid, and feel so embarrassed you think you can't
ever come back here, then don't worry about it. There are no grudges
here, so pick yourself up, order another beer and sit yourself down
again. If you really, really crossed the line, an apology always helps
smooth things out.
Don't claim to be someone you're not.
People making dubious claims about themselves (claiming to be a MotoGP
racer, boys claiming to be girls, etc) and found to be full of shit
will be exposed and humiliated, and their details passed on to Australian
Taxation Office, the US Department of Homeland Security, Hizbollah and
anyone else ugly we can think of.
Consequences of breaking the above.
With most of our rules, it is unlikely there will ever be any formal
action taken if you break them (unless you've done something illegal).
We generally don't censor people or explicitly try to control their
behaviour. We just say what we like and don't like, and then trust you
to decide how to conduct yourself. If you break these rules consistently,
then people will most likely start to treat you with contempt, and if
you really piss us off one of the admins will probably kill your account
or ban your IP address or something.
Post-whoring is the act of submitting vapid, meaningless messages to a forum. We do not like this. Examples of post-whoring include:
Prolific posting is not post-whoring. Comments of interest are absolutely welcome at all times, in any volume. This includes comments that may not actually be as interesting as you first thought, but at least demonstrate some form of mental effort.
Breaking any of the above criteria on occasion is certainly tolerable as well. It's only the people who do it consistently will annoy us. As with our other rules, we won't punish you, but we might start to treat you like a lesser being.
A special note on smilies: Smilies do not constitute meaningful discourse. Smilies are beaut for adding clarity about your tone, and can help to communicate non-verbal things (like a seemingly harsh statement actually being meant in jest). But they do not constitute meaningful communication by themselves, and posts that consist of nothing but smilies will make us think that you are, in fact, a 13 year old girl with a poster of a pretty horse on your bedroom wall.