Shells rules
Revision as of 13:59, 25 January 2012 by imported>Wikiadmin
Though we are a very flexible and liberal shell hosting service, there are still things that will get you banned.
Here is the list of these things:
- Attempting to interfere with other users files or processes
- Attempting to run rootkits, exploits, viruses etc
- Excessive port scanning on targets you don't have permission to scan
- Excessive vulnerability scanning on targets you don't have permission to scan
- Getting the server banned from websites and IRC networks etc.
- Hosting illegal or copyrighted materials
- Hosting phishing sites
- Hosting unprotected web proxies, php shells, tor nodes etc.
- Intentionally trying to break the server or a service
- Providing third parties access to services and/or server resources without express permission.
- Running applications that consume unfair amounts of resources, either CPU time, RAM, disk space or bandwidth (this includes torrents, tor nodes, game servers and SHOUTcast)
- Selling access to hosting or services
- Storing files outside your home directory
- Using the server as a platform for attacks on other networks or services.
Rules regarding invites:
- Any user may generate one invite per 30 days.
- Getting an invite is not getting a shell. When you have an invite, you can request a shell, and we will consider it.
- If a user you have invited gets rejected, you may not generate a new invite for those 30 days.
- Once an invite code has been used to make a request, it can not be used again.
- When a user you have invited gets banned, you will receive a strike against your account.
- 3 strikes, and you're outof here.
- For every strike, the amount of invites you can generate is reduced. Days between invites = 30 x (strikes + 1)
Anything not explicitly listed in these rules may still get you banned if we see fit, this is at the discretion of our staff.
Long story short: please don't be a dick.