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aronsky2013-12-24 15:30:49
Habr
aronsky, 2013-12-24 15:30:49

What content falls under the Habr rules "Habr is not a book of complaints"?

I immediately apologize for asking a question on a somewhat third-party resource, but we were deprived of q&a, and I can’t ask the opinion of the habra community elsewhere.
Question about the item "Habr is not a complaint book." I'm wondering what do you think falls into this category?
Here is an example of some posts that describe scam schemes (very interesting posts that have received a large number of positive ratings and, perhaps, saved someone from getting into money):
Nigerian scammers on Molotok.ru. One of the schemes ... An
almost perfect scheme of fraud using ...
An interesting scam, or How to get away
with it Do you think these posts fall under this category? Are they complaints?
Well, the post that prompted me to write this question:
How to deceive your buyers on Aliexpress
Does it differ from the posts above in the direction of more "complaining". Does he fall under this rule?
Once again, I apologize if you have nothing to do with Habr (although I don’t know how likely such a situation is).

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3 answer(s)
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TomasHuk, 2013-12-24
@TomasHuk

Maybe the fact is that the above posts have been posted for a long time, and recently the administration of the habr has either tightened moderation, or just then someone had a bad day ...
Well, or as an option, the hub is just not suitable, you should have tried it in "Information Security" (all examples are from that hub, and your post was posted in another).
And yes, your post is not plaintive, just informational. After all, you are not complaining about anyone, but simply revealing a method of possible fraud.
PS Thanks for the post, I'll keep it in mind.

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Ilya Grom, 2013-12-24
@Gromobanan777

Regarding the post with webmoney: the person was not caught, an entertaining story, a deception scheme and a conclusion. As for webmoney and bitcoin - similarly, we position ourselves as a strong and close-knit IT community, therefore, these posts take place as a warning to others who are very likely to get caught too. The same goes for the MacBook story. It is hard to imagine the conclusions and morals in the complaint.
Your post about Aliexpress, IMHO, is a little more ordinary (it seems to me that such situations are not uncommon). Perhaps it was worth writing more pretentiously or somehow emphasizing and highlighting the conclusions / morality that would serve as the weight of the article and recognition of its objective usefulness.

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Petrusha Ukropov, 2013-12-24
@artishok

Here is a great example of a post that fits the rules habrahabr.ru/post/207264

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