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fireundubh

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About fireundubh

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    https://letsplaywithfire.com
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    fireundubh
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  1. Records that contain reflection data - a type of data blob with up to 1,000+ sub/record types - cannot be edited, copied, or saved at this time. Elminster and Gibbed are working on this and good progress is being made, but you won't see reflection support for at least a month.
  2. Dark addressed the change in the Mod Authors Discord a few days ago. The rate at which users are upgrading to Premium membership has increased significantly. Don't believe the lies and distortions by forever free users; the change has so far proven to be a massive boon to the Nexus.
  3. Um... First of all, if you can't afford to spend US$2.99 for a month of Premium membership (which includes the Supporter role for a lifetime), playing games and downloading mods aren't going to lead you to the promised land. Second, the Nexus shares a percentage of Premium membership revenue with mod authors across the network in the form of Donation Points (DP). 89.9% of the payouts to mod authors is sourced directly from Nexus revenue. The 10.1% remainder comes from the Mod Author Donation Fund.
  4. 1. There are 858 games on the Nexus, not just the few games by Bethesda. 2. Bethesda can't and won't tell the Nexus how to run its business. 3. Consequently, the Nexus can charge for any number of things related to its services, including storage space, download rates, traffic/bandwidth limits, file upload/download limits, page limits, API limits, and other systems and features. There are many, many places where Nexus can monetize and, you know what, they don't.
  5. The Nexus promotes its offerings to bring in revenue to keep the lights on and reward mod authors. The users who have free accounts want everything for free without interruptions, distractions, or limitations forever - damn the costs! Who's greedy again? You liked my donut story but you clearly missed the point.
  6. I'm sure you were right on the checkout page in another browser tab when, wham, the change took place, and you were like "nah, fam, I can't support dis." Please...
  7. If you use the script, you would be violating the Nexus Terms of Service. That's the line that would be crossed. As I said, you're asking a very strange question.
  8. Generally. You already said you're a Premium member and we can see that badge plainly. No reason I'd be referring to you specifically.
  9. This is from the Nexus Terms of Service: We reserve the right to change this document, as well as our various policies and guidelines, at any time. By continuing to use the service, you automatically agree to any revisions of these terms. [...] Nexus Mods reserves the right to reconfigure its offerings and organisation and may choose to do so at any time. This includes but is not limited to our services, website designs, membership pricing and offerings, advertising programs and partnerships, as well as staff related and/or administrative restructuring. Using that script is a violation of the Nexus TOS: You will use Nexus Mods services reasonably and as intended. You may not display, duplicate, dismantle, reverse engineer, circumvent, or repurpose any property or service owned or operated by Nexus Mods without consent. You will not intentionally harm, disparage, or in any way disrupt the operation of Nexus Mods websites, systems, property, or staff. I've been in contact with a member of the Nexus staff. They are aware of the script, as well as that it breaks certain elements of the site, and they have confirmed that using that script is a TOS violation. The consequences for using that script have not been disclosed to me, but if you are using that script, you should be aware that you are crossing a line.
  10. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERNEX - "The Nexus of History for the Known Universe!" -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Welcome, Free User! Search Query> civilization:Earth AND species:Human AND donuts -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 18,933,350 records matched your query. Returning the most recent one: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Record ID: af9b507f-3ea6-4aac-948b-fd4ebcaa3235 Record Type: Summary [Limited Access] Record Content: [expanded] Every Monday morning, employees assembled in an open meeting room for free donuts. After indulging their sweet tooths, they started their work days happy in their cubicles. And then one Monday morning the employees arrived at work to a different world: there was a line to the meeting room, and the door was closed. The manager decided employees who did not contribute to the donut budget would wait before entering the meeting room to obtain free donuts, and while they waited, an assistant would be posted outside the door to distribute pamphlets outlining the reasons to contribute to the donut budget. After begrudgingly waiting in line and indulging their sweet tooths, instead of heading back to their cubicles happy as they were the Monday morning before, the employees found their way to the manager's feedback box. In messages hastily scrawled on used napkins, they expressed their displeasure with the new donut policy. • Some criticized the style of the pamphlet; they wanted the pamphlet to be redesigned to look less like other pamphlets they had seen. • Some said that although they did not take issue with waiting in line for free donuts, they thought the door should stay open; the door constantly opening and closing was annoying. • Some claimed they couldn’t afford to contribute to the donut budget, but that in recognition of their desire to contribute, they should be treated like contributors regardless. • Some complained they had been teased by employees who contributed to the donut budget, and if the teasing did not cease, they would consult with human resources about their options. • Some argued the workplace was a community and the new donut policy was dividing the community along strict party lines. • Some said that nobody should have to pay for free donuts because— [Translation Note: These messages could not be translated completely from this civilization’s records. The phrase "DONUTS FOR ALL" accompanied some messages. We apologize for the inconvenience.] • Some stated they would start looking for new jobs with another company where they would not have to wait in line for free donuts. • Some assailed the manager as greedy for hoarding all the free donuts behind a paywall. [Translation Note: These messages may not have been correctly translated from their original language. We apologize for the inconvenience.] • Some claimed the new donut policy spelled disaster for the company, their profession, their industry, and the entire world. • Some laughed that everyone else was crazy because the donuts were still free. • Others stood next to the feedback box to explain what they saw as the obvious rationale behind the manager's decision: there wouldn’t be enough free donuts for everyone if the donut budget didn’t scale with the company’s growth. The manager was unaware the new donut policy had been so controversial; he was on vacation. [ Other messages were found in this civilization’s records. Would you like to UPGRADE your account to view more? ]
  11. I would also like to point out something about Premium membership: Some percentage of Premium membership revenue is allocated for distribution to mod authors via Donation Points. Premium membership revenue doesn't just help the Nexus as a business; it helps those of us who make the mods and tools you came here for.
  12. I agree. I would say that the doom-and-glooming about this change is likewise over the top. But this is the Internet and there's only so much time in the day... Did all the Nexus news posts about expenses and new hires not tip you off? How about the name of the company "Black Tree Gaming Ltd."? "Ltd." is a standard legal abbreviation for its corporate structure. How about the front page? "We host 237,905 files for 855 games from 98,803 authors serving 18,933,350 members with 3,662,939,491 downloads to date." That's a network of 855 communities, like the Planet Network owned by GameSpy Industries back in the day. There is no such thing as "the community." The Nexus is a platform and has been for quite a while. I've never argued for extra clicks or page reloads. In fact, I've already given my feedback to the Nexus on how to address it but everyone is on holiday vacation.
  13. Ad-driven business models have been dead or dying since the proliferation of ad blockers. Even major media outlets are moving or have moved to subscription models.
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