On Sun, 2025-10-26 at 09:26 -0700, Automaticat via agora-discussion wrote:
> On October 26, 2025 1:22:58 AM PDT, secretsnail9 via agora-discussion 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> > 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.
> 
> 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.

FWIW, I think I'm leaning towards agreeing with the judgement as
submitted (and disagreeing with the older precedent): the rule cares
about whether the text was obfuscated or not, and inessential
obfuscation is still obfuscation. (A good way to think about it is to
flip the requirement around: if the rule had said that the intent
succeeds only if it *is* obfuscated, I think that this sort of trivial
obfuscation would be a good way to comply with that requirement.)

I don't think this sort of obfuscation prevents an action by
announcement succeeding, but intents have an additional non-obfuscation
requirement on top of that.

-- 
ais523

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