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askray.

Aethro Exec
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Blog Entries posted by askray.

  1. The Ultimate Guide: How to Get 'Starting Gear' (Investment) for Your Minecraft Server
    Running a Minecraft server is like playing in a high-stakes survival world. To build something big, you sometimes need more "starting gear" (money) than you have in your personal inventory. While many people just send a quick, messy Discord DM, that rarely gets a "yes." To find a partner or investor, you have to show them that you have a plan that is fun, organized, and smart.

    1. Thinking Like a Pro (The "Loot" Strategy)
    An investor isn't giving you a "donation"—they are making a trade. They give you money now so the server can grow, and later, they get a slice of the server's success (the loot).

    Understanding the Jargon
    Pro Word
    What it means in Minecraft
    ROI
    Loot Back: If someone gives you 10 diamonds to start a farm, and you give them back 13 diamonds later, that's a 130% ROI.
    CCU
    Players Online: How many people are playing on your server at the exact same time.
    EULA
    The Server Rules: Mojang's official rules on how you're allowed to make money.
    Monetization
    The Shop: How you sell cool stuff like ranks, hats, or server-wide boosts.

    2. The "Pro" Discord Message
    Professional Discord messages use "Markdown" to make information look clean and easy to read. Instead of one long paragraph, use headers and bullet points to help an investor see the "loot" quickly.

    Formatting Tricks for Discord:
    Bold: Use **Text** for important parts.
    Headers: Use # for a big title or ## for a smaller one.
    Lists: Use - at the start of lines to make bullet points.
    Masked Links: Use [Click Here](URL) to hide long links.

    The Professional Pitch Template
    This is a randomized template you can fill in with your own server's details:

    3. Creating Your "Shopping List" (The Budget)
    Investors want to see exactly where their money goes. Providing a clear list shows you aren't just guessing.
    Item
    Estimated Cost
    Strategic Reason
    High-Performance Hosting
    $30.00 - $60.00
    Prevents lag when 50+ players are online.
    Animated Server Banner
    $40.00
    Grabs attention on server lists to get more clicks.
    TikTok/Shorts Promotion
    $50.00 - $100.00
    Pays influencers to show your server to their fans.
    Custom Domain (.com)
    $12.00
    Makes the IP easy to remember (e.g., play.server.com).
    4. The Math of "Loot Back" (ROI)
    You should show the investor how they get their money back. Use this formula to explain the profit:

    For example, if someone invests $100 and the server earns enough to pay them back $130, their ROI is 30%.

    5. Staying EULA-Compliant (The Rules)
    Mojang has rules about what you can sell. To keep the server (and the investment) safe from being blacklisted, only sell "Non-Pay-to-Win" items.
    Great things to sell:
    Cosmetics: Trails, particles, pets, and chat tags.
    Server Boosters: XP or money buffs that help everyone on the server at once.
    Convenience: Priority queue for joining when the server is full.

    Summary: The Path to a "Yes"
    Be Organized: Use the Discord template to make your message stand out.
    Be Specific: Always list exactly what the money is for (hosting, ads, etc.).
    Show the Plan: Use CCU (players online) and ROI (loot back) to show the server is growing.
    Stay Legal: Follow the EULA so the server stays online for a long time.
    By treating your server like a serious project rather than just a hobby, you increase your chances of finding a great partner to help you build the next big network. Note: This is a basic guide to asking for investors. It is not going to be a be all, end all. Later on we will create a bigger version to help those that want a really in-depth version.
  2. Congratulations. You have just started a Minecraft server. You have four friends who play once a week, a spawn built entirely out of diamond blocks, and, for some reason, a staff list longer than the credits of a Marvel movie.
    If your staff to player ratio is 2:1, you are not running a community: you are running a vanity project with extra steps. While massive networks require a structured distribution of authority, many small servers are drowning in rank bloat. This guide covers why your eight-tier hierarchy is likely overkill and why even the biggest servers on the planet are starting to realize that less is more.

    The Technical Reality: Why Your JrAdmin is Just a Player with a Fancy Tag
    The diversification of staff titles is often less about management and more about the psychological incentivization of volunteer labor. When you cannot pay people, you give them a different colored prefix. But from a technical perspective, most of these ranks are redundant.
    Modern permission plugins like LuckPerms allow for parent-child relationships where a Senior Moderator simply inherits everything a Moderator can do. On a massive scale, this is a security protocol. It ensures that a new Helper cannot accidentally delete your world files while trying to mute a chat spammer. But on a server with 10 players, having a Helper, a JrMod, a Mod, and a SrMod is just an operational nightmare of cluttered chat and confused players.

    The Bloat
    What They Actually Do
    Why It is Usually Overkill
    Helper / JrMod
    Mute people for saying heck.
    You could just do this yourself.
    Moderator / SrMod
    Ban the same three griefers who keep coming back.
    One Mod rank is plenty for a small community.
    JrAdmin / Admin
    Change the time to day and mess with LuckPerms.
    Unless they have SSH access, they are just Mods with a title.
    Specialized Managers
    Post once a week on a Discord channel.
    Most small servers do not have enough "media" to manage.

    The Media Exception: When is it Actual Work?
    To be fair, some places really do need media people. If your server is a legitimate network pulling in hundreds of players, a Media Manager is a functional necessity for growth. Their job involves developing content calendars, coordinating with YouTubers for trailers, and building community hype through social media campaigns. Large networks like Hypixel even have dedicated Content Management Teams for video production and graphics because they are running a business, not a hobby.
    However, if your "Media Manager" is just a friend who posts a blurry screenshot of a cow to an empty Twitter account once a month, you have fallen into the rank bloat trap. A media rank should represent a set of skills in marketing and production, not just a way to feel important without having to actually moderate the server.

    Functional Necessity or Just Rankism?
    There is a legitimate argument for specialization on servers that actually have work to do. High-tier networks like WesterosCraft use Builders for construction and Rangers for terraforming because you do not want a moderator making aesthetic decisions about a castle wall. Similarly, ManaCube uses Map Judges and QA Leaders because they have a massive volume of community content to vet.
    However, for the average survival server, a deep hierarchy often breeds rankism: a toxic culture where staff members prioritize their status over actual service. When the goal becomes ranking up rather than helping players, the quality of moderation drops. Staff focus on ticket quotas simply to move from High-Ranking Staff to Senior Staff. In smaller communities, this just leads to rank-shopping where players ignore the Helper because they want to speak to the Head-SrAdmin-Manager instead.

    Case Study: Hypixel's Reality Check
    If you still think your 50 player network needs 12 staff ranks, look at Hypixel. As the largest network in existence, they spent years with a stratified system: JrHelper, Helper, Moderator, Game Master, and Admin.
    In April 2025, they threw most of that out the window in favor of a Unified Staff Rank. They combined Game Master and Admin into one Hypixel Staff designation. The reasoning was simple: they wanted to better align as a team. Internally, the developers still develop and the support agents still answer tickets, but publicly, the rank-based prestige was nuked. If the world's biggest server decided that multiple administrative prefixes were a hindrance to team unity, your survival server probably does not need a Junior Assistant to the Staff Manager.

    Strategic Synthesis: How to Not Be Cringe
    The general rule of thumb from veteran administrators is simple: the less messy, the better. If your network has under 100 people, having more than three staff tiers looks untidy and unprofessional.
    Small Servers (1-50 players): Stick to Owner and Moderator. Anything else is a vanity project.
    Medium Servers (50-500 players): Add a trial rank like Helper to vet newcomers and an Admin tier to handle technical backend tasks.
    Giant Networks (500+ players): This is the only time you actually need specialized managers for HR (Staff Manager) or PR and Content (Media Manager).

    Conclusion: Stop Prefix-Hunting
    A staff hierarchy should be a tool for server stability, not a collection of participation trophies. Every time you add a rank like JrAdmin, you are not adding authority. You are adding a layer of bureaucratic lag between a player's problem and a solution.
    If you want a successful community, focus on finding people you can trust and giving them the tools to do the job. Do not give them a different colored tag for every three weeks they manage not to quit. The most professional servers are the ones where you do not even notice the hierarchy because the staff is too busy actually helping people to brag about their prefix.
  3. Why Spamming Other Discords is the Fastest Way to Kill Your Minecraft Server
    We’ve all seen it. You’re chilling in a community Discord, and someone joins just to drop a "Hey join my server! IP: play.scam-mc.net" before getting instantly nuked by a bot. As a server owner, you might be tempted to think this is a "free" way to get players. In reality, it is the most effective way to ensure your server never grows.
    If you are still joining other guilds to spam your IP or mass-DMing users, you are working against yourself. Here is the breakdown of why this strategy is a terminal failure for any serious Minecraft project.

    1. The Technical Barrier: Discord's Automated Defense
    Discord has evolved far beyond simple chat monitoring. When you spam, you aren't just fighting one moderator; you are fighting an entire infrastructure designed to delete you.
    Account Standing: Discord uses a weighted "Warning System" that tracks your account's health across the entire platform. Once you are flagged for spam, your account moves from "All Good" to "Limited" or "At Risk." This can result in your account being restricted for up to a year or permanently suspended.

    AutoMod Wildcards: Most servers now use Discord’s native AutoMod with wildcard filters (like *discord.gg* or *play.*) that intercept your message before anyone even sees it.

    Honeypot Channels: Professional servers often set up "honeypot" channels—areas that look like general chat but are actually monitored by bots like MEE6 or Carl-bot to instantly ban anyone who posts there.

    2. "Brand Poisoning": The Reputation Killer
    In marketing, there is a phenomenon called "Brand Poisoning." This happens when your advertising is so intrusive and annoying that people begin to hate your product before they even try it.

    When you spam a link, the community immediately labels your server as:
    Low Quality: The assumption is that if the server was actually good, you wouldn't need to break rules to find players.

    A Potential Scam: Minecraft is currently plagued by "OAuth scams" and phishing attempts. Most veteran players view unsolicited Discord invites as a security risk and will report your server to Discord Trust & Safety and Mojang immediately.

    A "Trashcan" Server: In communities like r/admincraft, spammers are often "witch hunted," and their IPs are shared on blacklists used by thousands of other server owners.

    3. The Math Doesn't Work
    Growth is a numbers game, but spamming provides the wrong numbers. Professional data shows that it takes roughly 270 unique joins to get just one active player who sticks around.

    Spamming brings in "low-intent" players—people who are either bots themselves or trolls looking for a server to grief. These players contribute to the "2-week server problem," where a playercount peaks during a hype spike and then plummets to zero because there is no actual community foundation. You are wasting hours of work for a 0% retention rate.

    4. How to Actually Grow in 2025 and 2026
    If you want a server that lasts longer than a month, you need to move from "interruption-based" marketing to "value-based" growth.
    Short-Form Video (The New Meta): TikTok and YouTube Shorts are the most powerful growth engines right now. A 12-second clip showcasing a unique feature or a funny interaction can drive more "high-intent" players than a thousand spam DMs.
    Niche Development: Instead of a generic "Survival" server, focus on a specific theme (e.g., "Semi-Hardcore" or "Custom Economy") that gives players a reason to search for you.

    Referral Programs: Incentivize your current players to invite their friends. Word-of-mouth is the most cost-effective way to scale because it brings in players who already have a social reason to stay.
    Strategic Listings: Use high-traffic directories and voting plugins. These sites are where players actively go to find a new home, meaning they are already in a "ready to play" mindset.

    The Bottom Line
    Spamming other Discords makes you look desperate, unprofessional, and potentially malicious. It triggers Discord's safety systems, gets your IP blacklisted, and ensures that the only players you attract are the ones who will leave in ten minutes.
    If you want to be a top-tier server, act like one. Focus on building a community that players want to talk about naturally. Quality always outlasts spam.
  4. The 2026 Discord Security & Ownership Standard (v2.0)

    "Control your permissions, or someone else will."
    As the TMS Team, we prioritize server integrity. This document is the definitive standard for Minecraft community owners. If you ignore these protocols, you are voluntarily accepting the risk of a total community nuke.


    I. The Fundamental Commandments
    Ownership is Absolute: Never transfer Server Ownership for “setup.” If you transfer it willingly, you are unlikely to recover it unless the new owner cooperates. Discord’s ownership transfer process is for specific eligibility cases (like owner inactivity), not “I got tricked.”
    Token Security: Your bot token is a root password. It allows anyone to control your bot and perform any action the bot’s role allows. Treat it like your bank password.
    The "Zero-Admin" Policy: Never grant the Administrator permission. A professional setup never requires it.
    DM "Verification" Scams: Ignore any request to "Verify" via a link or QR code in DMs. These are token-loggers designed to hijack your account.


    II. Precision Permissions: The Developer Role
    When hiring a developer, do not give them a "Manager" role. Create a custom "Sandbox" role placed below your Moderator roles in the hierarchy.
    🛡️ Use These Scopes Judiciously:
    Manage Channels: Required for structure and category setup.
    Manage Webhooks (High Risk): Only grant this if they are actively wiring DiscordSRV or external integrations. Webhooks can be used to impersonate staff for phishing/spam.
    Manage Expressions (Optional): Only if they need to upload or manage emojis, stickers, or soundboard assets.
    View Audit Log: Essential for troubleshooting.
    Manage Roles (Extreme Risk): Default to OFF. Only grant if absolutely necessary for bot-role linking. Remember: they can only edit roles placed below their own.


    III. The Infrastructure Tool: Xenon Bot
    Stop giving devs access to your live server. Use a staging environment.
    Tool Link: Xenon.bot
    Staging Server: Build the layout in a blank server where the dev has full perms.
    Backup & Transfer: Use Xenon to create a backup of the staging server and load it into your live server.
    Result: You get a professional structure without ever exposing your members or live environment to a stranger.


    IV. Defensive Infrastructure
    Mandatory 2FA: Enable "Require 2FA for Moderation" in Safety Setup. This is your primary defense against staff account hijackings.
    Anti-Nuke Bots: Utilize bots like Wick. These bots detect mass deletions, kicks, and role chaos, then automatically lock down the server and contain the damage through predefined thresholds.
    Security Actions: Use the native Discord Security Actions (Server Dropdown) to freeze the server in an emergency. Note: This is a temporary lockdown (typically capped at 24 hours) to give you time to audit and recover.


    V. Professional Vetting Protocol
    The Live Server Test: If a dev demands access to your live server instead of working in a staging environment, deny the request.
    The Dev Portal Team: If they are coding a custom bot, you should own the application. Add them to your "Team" in the Discord Developer Portal. You retain the "Kill Switch."
    Red Flags: Defensive behavior when questioned about security, asking for "Ownership" for "API reasons," or demanding the Bot Token.
  5. The 2026 Blueprint for Growing a Minecraft Community

    Growing a server in 2026 isn't just about "being friendly." It’s about building a digital brand that players can access anywhere, on any device, without lag. Whether you’re running a vanilla SMP or a heavy-duty modded Forge world, here is how you turn a lobby of three friends into a thriving community.


    1. The Core Strategy: Modernizing the Basics
    The "30-Second Hook" (Unique Experience)
    In 2026, the first 30 seconds of a player’s session determine if they’ll ever come back.
    The Update: Forget the "wall of text" rules at spawn. Use interactive NPCs or a guided starter quest that immediately gives the player a tool or a purpose. If they don't feel "powerful" or "curious" within a minute, they’ll leave.
    Community Governance (Active & Friendly)
    "Friendly" is a given. Today, players want ownership.
    The Update: Integrate your server with DiscordSRV so the community lives in their pockets. Use a "Governance" model where players can vote on new features or economy shifts. When players help build the world's lore, they don't quit, because quitting means losing their history.
    The Short-Form Content Funnel (Promotion)
    Forums are for archives; TikTok/Reels are for growth.
    The Update: You are no longer a "Server Owner"; you are a "Content Creator." Record 15-second clips of base tours, "admin abuse" pranks (the harmless kind!), or satisfying build time-lapses. Use the "IP in Bio" strategy to funnel millions of potential viewers directly to your server address.


    2. Technical Excellence: Robust Operations
    The Hardware Standard
    In 2026, "minimal lag" means running at a constant 20 TPS (Ticks Per Second) regardless of how many TNT cannons are firing.
    The Spec: Look for hosts using AMD Ryzen 9 9900X or 9950X processors. Minecraft is primarily single-threaded; you need high clock speeds (5.6GHz+), not just "more RAM."
    The Storage: Ensure you’re on NVMe Gen4 or Gen5 SSDs. This virtually eliminates "chunk lag" when players are flying with Elytras.
    The "Geyser" Requirement (Cross-play)
    If your server is Java-only, you are ignoring half the market.
    The Update: Use GeyserMC and Floodgate. This allows Bedrock players (Xbox, PlayStation, Mobile) to join your Java server seamlessly. In 2026, accessibility is the #1 growth hack.


    3. The Power of Forge: Running Modded Operations
    If you’re running a Forge server, you’re playing on "Hard Mode." Modded Minecraft is significantly more resource-intensive, but it offers a level of depth that keeps players around for months instead of weeks.
    Managing the "Modded" Load
    Forge servers can eat CPU for breakfast. To keep operations robust:
    Pre-Generate Everything: Use a plugin like Chunky to pre-generate your world map. Modded world-gen (like Terraforged or Oh The Biomes You'll Go) is a server-killer. If the server has to generate those biomes while 10 people are exploring, it will crash.
    The Modpack Barrier: The hardest part of Forge is getting players to download the mods.
    Pro-Tip: Create a custom profile on CurseForge or Modrinth and share the "One-Click" link in your Discord. The easier it is to join, the more players you'll get.
    Optimization for Forge
    Standard "lag fix" plugins usually break Forge mechanics. Instead:
    Use Spark to profile your server performance. It will tell you exactly which modded machine or entity is eating your TPS.
    Allocate at least 8GB–12GB of RAM if you have 100+ mods, but don't over-allocate (it makes Java's "Garbage Collection" slow down the server).


    4. Automation: The "Always On" Server
    You can't be online 24/7, but your server should feel like you are.
    Automated Events: Set up a plugin like EliteCreatures or SpecialEvents to trigger a boss fight or a "supply drop" every 6 hours automatically.
    Self-Service Ranks: Use LuckPerms with a web store (like Tebex) so players can earn or buy ranks/perks instantly without needing an admin to manually type commands.

  6. Welcome back, Citizens of Aethro! We’ve spent the morning tinkering under the hood, making things slightly more difficult for your mechanical dreams and significantly noisier for your Pokémon hunting. Please read the following notes while imagining a very enthusiastic trumpet playing in the background.
    ✨ The "Shiny & Loud" Additions
    The Tattle-Tale System (Cobblemon): We’ve installed a server-wide megaphone. Now, whenever a Pokémon spawns—especially the Legendaries—the server will shout it from the rooftops. No more "stealth catching" while everyone else is mining!
    The Sparkle Assistance Program (Myths and Legends): We’ve added some mystical backup to help those elusive Legendaries and Shiny Pokémon actually show their faces. They were feeling shy; we gave them a pep talk.
    The Amnesiacs Have Returned: The NPCs who explain how this whole operation works have finally remembered where they parked and are returning to Spawn. If you're lost, go talk to the people standing perfectly still.
    🔧 The "Cleaning Up the Mess" Updates
    Create: Ultimate Factory (The "Work Harder, Not Smarter" Nerf): We noticed some of you were moving too fast. A few recipes have been made intentionally more difficult because we believe in "character building" through industrial suffering.
    Sophisticated Backpacks & Core: Performed some light brain surgery on your luggage. The logic in the background has been fixed so your backpacks should now be slightly smarter than a pile of leather.
    MineColonies: A massive dump of fixes. Your colonists have been told to stop staring at walls and actually get back to work.
    SWEM (Star Worm Equestrian Mod): We’ve polished the horses. They should now be approximately 12% less glitchy and 100% more majestic.
    Cyclops Core & Waystones: General stability updates. The Waystones now know exactly where they are at all times (which is good, because that's their only job).
  7. It is 2026, and somehow, the "Mega-Server" dream is still alive and kicking. You know the one: you join a single IP, and without ever switching servers, you have Factions to your left, Skyblock to your right, a Nations world somewhere in the basement, and a handful of Minigames floating in the sky. It sounds like a revolutionary "all-you-can-eat" buffet of blocky goodness.
    In reality, an all-in-one single-instance server is usually a "Buffet of Broken Dreams." Here is why trying to be everything at once on a single server is the fastest way to turn your community into a ghost town.

    1. The CPU is a Stressed-Out Short-Order Cook
    Think of your server’s CPU as a chef in a tiny kitchen with exactly one burner. This is because, even in 2026, Minecraft’s core game loop remains stubbornly single-threaded.
    If you have a Factions raid happening, a massive redstone sugarcane farm in Skyblock, and three people flying Elytras in the Nations world, they are all standing in the same line, waiting for that one chef to flip their specific pancake. When the Nations world gets busy, the Factions players start "rubber-banding" back in time. Your CPU isn't "powerful" enough to handle three different genres of math at the exact same millisecond, and eventually, it just starts screaming "Server can't keep up!" into the console until everyone dicsonnects.

    2. The "Baklava Code" Nightmare
    When you throw fifty different plugins into one bucket to manage three different game modes, you aren't building a server; you're building a "Baklava." This is a technical term for code that has so many layers of unoptimized, overlapping junk that the whole thing eventually turns into a sticky, unmanageable mess.
    The plugin that handles "land claims" in Factions will eventually decide it hates the plugin that generates "islands" in Skyblock. You’ll spend your Friday nights fighting "Hydra Bugs"—where you fix one shop glitch only for two new glitches to spawn in the crate system. By the time you "finish" the setup, a new version of Minecraft has probably dropped, and you have to start the nightmare all over again.

    3. Economic Entropy (or, Why Your Money is Worthless)
    Managing a single Minecraft economy is hard. Managing three at once on the same server is like trying to run a country where the currency is simultaneously backed by gold, printer paper, and high-fives.
    In a Survival or Nations world, money should be hard to get. It represents sweat, tears, and mining at 3:00 AM. But in Skyblock or Prison, players "print" money using automated cobblestone generators and infinite mob farms. If those economies are even slightly linked, or if the same shop plugin handles both, you get hyperinflation. New players will log in, see a basic shovel costs $500,000, and immediately log out because they don’t want to play "Inflation Simulator 2026."

    4. The "Ghost Town" Effect
    This is the silent killer. Imagine you have 50 active players—a respectable number! But if you fragment them across Factions, Skyblock, Nations, and Minigames, you now have four different groups of roughly 12 people.
    To a new player, the server feels empty. They join the Nations world and see only ten other people scattered across a 10,000-block map. It feels lonely, eerie, and "dead," even if the server is technically "busy." You lose the "critical mass" needed for a thriving community. You end up with "single-player with chat," where people only interact to complain about the lag you're getting from the other game modes they aren't even playing.

    5. Admin Burnout and the Toxicity Trickle-Down
    Operating a "Franken-server" is the fastest way to stop actually playing Minecraft. As the owner, you become a full-time technician. Instead of building cool events, you’re reading crash logs and trying to figure out why the "Arrow to the Knee" plugin just nuked the entire Nations database.
    This stress trickles down. Stressed owners yell at admins, admins get short with moderators, and moderators start banning players just to clear their ticket queues. It creates an infinite loop of toxicity that has killed even the biggest empires of the past.

    The TMS Verdict: Master of One
    The most successful servers in 2026 are the ones that have the courage to say "No" to the kitchen sink.
    Pick a niche. If you want to do Nations, make the best Nations experience on the planet. Polish that last 20% of the experience that everyone else ignores. When you focus on one thing, your CPU is happy, your economy makes sense, and your 50 players are all in one place, actually talking to each other.
    Don't build a buffet; build a five-star restaurant. Your players (and your sanity) will thank you
  8. Date: January 31st, 2026
    Welcome back to another episode of "What did the developers poke this time?" We’ve got a hefty list of updates for you today, ranging from navigational dingoes to the temporary retirement of some very rowdy commanders.
    Grab a snack (perhaps some Ravager jerky?) and dive into the changes.
    🏛️ Architecture & Aesthetics
    The Lazy Guard Fix: Turns out the Byzantine Gatehouses were technically "working," but the guards were just unionizing and refusing to be assigned to their posts. We’ve had a talk with them; you can now correctly assign guards to your Byzantine gatehouses again without the server screaming.
    Nile Upgrades: We’ve added a fancy new Enchanter’s Shrine to the Nile set.
    The "Because Why Not" Update: Domum Ornamentum has been updated. Why? Because the "Update All" button was right there, and we like shiny new things.
    Chisel Me This: Rechiseled has been updated to fix an issue where in-world chiseling was refusing to work on the server. It’s back to being cooperative now.
    ⚔️ Mob Hunting & Survival
    Ravager BBQ: The Butchery mod now supports Ravagers. If you manage to kill one, you can now turn it into dinner. Even better, you can convert butchered food back into vanilla food items for when you just want a normal burger.
    Botany Pots: Fixed a visual glitch where crops would reach their final growth stage and then just... stay invisible. No more guessing when your carrots are ready.
    Easy Mob Farm: This was a massive update. There are too many changes to list without my circuits overheating, so let's just say it’s "Better™."
    🐕 Pets & People
    Dingo-Direct: The Dingo Pet from Inventory Pets has finally learned how to use a map. It should now correctly find the Y-coordinate for Ancient Cities and other underground treasures.
    FTB Teams: A few minor fixes to keep your social circles from imploding.
    Minecolonies & Structuring: Minecolonies got a huge update. As per the ancient laws of modding, since Minecolonies updated, Structuring had to update too. They’re basically inseparable at this point.
    🔧 The Technical "Boring" Stuff
    Cobblestone Stability: Fixed a crash involving Create Cobblestone. The universe will no longer collapse when you try to make rocks.
    Sophisticated Stuff: Both Core and Storage received updates. Limited Barrels now play nicely with the new void upgrade functionality, and our Simplified Chinese translations have been polished.
    Library Maintenance: Citadel, BlockUI, and the ever-updating Moonlight Library have all been bumped to their latest versions.
    🚫 The "Naughty List" (Temporary Disables)
  9. A batch of mod updates rolled out today aimed at stability, recipe fixes, and squashing a handful of bugs/exploits.


    Updated / Fixed
    Amendments — Fixed an issue with the dye bottle recipe.
    Cooking for Blockheads — Updated.
    Crafting Tweaks — Updated.
    Create: New Age — Updated to fix a server crash.
    Fusion — Updated.
    Inventory Pets (10 Year Anniversary) — Updated!

    Added the new “Dingot” pet
    Dingot can find and guide you to any structure in the game
    Plus assorted bug fixes / exploit patches

    War N Taxes — Updated.
    All Sophisticated mods — Updated to address a few bugs.
    Starcatcher — Updated to fix baits not being craftable.
    StyleColonies — Fixed a buildable camp and ship that incorrectly had spawn eggs.
    Villager Recruits — Fix applied (general stability/bug fix).
    Waystones — Fixed an issue where desert village waystones and waterlogged waystone structures were being treated as the same waystone.


    That’s the lot for today: fewer crashes, fewer broken recipes, fewer “wait, that’s an exploit” moments, and one very nosey Dingot helping you sniff out structures.
  10. 🧾 SECTION 1: TERMS OF SERVICE (ToS)
    Your ToS is your legal fortress. It's what users agree to when they sign up, and it better be clear, enforceable, and not just something you stole from a 2012 Minecraft server.
    ✅ Scope of Services
    What to include:
    Description of what you offer (VPS, shared hosting, domains, email)
    Limitations (e.g., best-effort uptime, not responsible for external outages)
    Why it matters:
    This limits your liability when Karen's Etsy site crashes because her cat stepped on the power button. Clarity up front prevents support headaches and angry PayPal disputes.
    ✅ Acceptable Use Policy (AUP)
    What to include:
    Bans on spam, DDoS, phishing, malware, and illegal content
    Clear consequences for violating terms (warnings, suspension, termination)
    Why it matters:
    You’re legally responsible for what’s hosted on your hardware. A strong AUP protects your IP ranges, your upstream provider relationship, and keeps you off abuse blacklists.
    ✅ Billing & Refund Policy
    What to include:
    Billing cycle, late fees, cancellation terms
    Clearly defined refund policies (full, partial, none) and eligibility
    Explain who handles payments (e.g., “via PayPal – we don’t store card data”)
    Why it matters:
    Your money flow depends on predictable billing. Without these details, disputes will eat your time, reputation, and profit. Ambiguous refund rules = automatic PayPal losses.
    ✅ Termination Clause
    What to include:
    Under what conditions you can suspend or terminate service
    Whether content/data is deleted immediately or held for a period
    Grace period if they forgot to pay (highly recommended)
    Why it matters:
    Protects you if someone turns your server into a ransomware farm or just ghosts you on invoices. Also gives you a legal out when you need to drop someone without drama.
    ✅ ToS Changes Clause
    What to include:
    Why it matters:
    Saying “we can change anything whenever we want” = legally worthless. Without notice, updated terms are unenforceable. Courts have yeeted entire ToSes for this. ALWAYS notify.
    ✅ Limitation of Liability
    What to include:
    “We are not liable for data loss, outages, or acts of God (like AWS melting down again)”
    “Max liability is limited to what you paid us in the last 30 days”
    Why it matters:
    Keeps you from being sued for someone else’s mistakes, or their unrealistic expectations (like 100% uptime on a $3.50 plan).
    ✅ Indemnification Clause
    What to include:
    “If your use of our service causes us to get sued, fined, or investigated, you’re responsible for covering our losses”
    Why it matters:
    It’s your legal parachute. Without this, someone can run a scam site through you and YOU get left holding the legal bag.
    ✅ Governing Law and Dispute Resolution
    What to include:
    The legal jurisdiction (e.g., California law applies)
    A clear process (e.g., try to resolve things by email first, then small claims court)
    Why it matters:
    If someone sues you from another state or country, this clause decides where and how the battle happens. Saves you from chasing them across the globe.
    🔐 SECTION 2: PRIVACY POLICY
    This is not optional. If you collect any personal data—including email, IP, or payment info—you’re bound by multiple laws, even if you’re a one-person hosting outfit.
    ✅ Who You Are
    What to include:
    Legal name, business name, address (or PO Box if you value your sanity), and contact email
    Why it matters:
    Transparency is required under GDPR and CCPA. Anonymous policies = noncompliance = fines.
    ✅ What You Collect
    What to include:
    Name, email, IPs, server logs, support messages, cookies, payment metadata
    Why it matters:
    People deserve to know what you’re collecting—and laws like GDPR say you must disclose it. Vague language like “we collect some info” is a fast track to penalties.
    ✅ Why You Collect It
    What to include:
    “To provide our services,” “to process payments,” “for security and analytics”
    Why it matters:
    This ties to the legal basis of processing. If you can’t justify why you're storing something, you shouldn’t have it. End of story.
    ✅ Legal Basis (GDPR Article 6)
    What to include:
    List which of these apply:
    Consent: For newsletters or cookies
    Contract: Hosting services
    Legal Obligation: Tax records, fraud detection
    Legitimate Interests: Debugging, metrics
    Why it matters:
    If you don’t declare a legal basis, you can’t legally process the data. EU auditors won’t find this funny.
    ✅ User Rights
    What to include:
    How users can request access, edits, or deletion of their data
    How to file a complaint
    How to opt out of marketing
    Why it matters:
    Both GDPR and CCPA require this. If you ignore a deletion request, congrats—you’re now noncompliant and potentially open to lawsuits or audits.
    ✅ Data Retention Policy
    What to include:
    “Logs are kept for X days,” “account info is deleted 30 days after cancellation”
    Why it matters:
    Helps you manage risk, comply with data minimization laws, and gives customers peace of mind. Holding data “forever” is not legally okay.
    ✅ Cookie Disclosure
    What to include:
    What cookies are used (session, auth, analytics)
    Whether they’re essential or optional
    Link to opt-out or control panel
    Why it matters:
    You need a cookie banner (especially in the EU). Ignoring this is one of the most common GDPR fines, and cookie compliance tools are now expected.
    ✅ CCPA-Specific Stuff
    What to include:
    “We do not sell your data” (unless you do, in which case… don’t)
    “Do Not Sell My Info” link
    Access and deletion instructions
    Why it matters:
    The CCPA is like GDPR-lite but still very real. Even if you're not based in California, if you serve Californians, you’re expected to comply.
    🔁 SECTION 3: Updating Policies
    ✅ ToS Updates
    Always show the effective date
    Send notifications via email, dashboard, or both
    Give at least 14 days' notice for any material changes
    Why it matters:
    Not notifying users makes your changes unenforceable. They could literally sue you under the old terms.
    ✅ Privacy Policy Updates
    Keep a “last updated” timestamp
    Notify users if the way you collect or process data changes
    Optional: changelog for transparency
    Why it matters:
    Transparency is legally required. You can’t suddenly decide to use all your logs for ad targeting and hope no one notices.
    🧰 SECTION 4: Free Tools & Legal Helpers
    Use these tools to help you build or audit your documents:
    🧾 https://termly.io/
    🧾 https://www.iubenda.com/
    🧾 https://www.privacypolicies.com/
    📚 https://gdpr.eu/
    📚 https://cppa.ca.gov/
    🧠 Final Tips (a.k.a. Don’t Be That Guy)
    Don’t use ChatGPT or Notepad for your only copy. Version and archive it.
    Link your ToS and Privacy Policy from every sign-up or payment screen.
    Don’t screw around with legal language unless you understand it. What sounds “powerful” might be legally useless (or even illegal).
    Never say “we own your content” unless you’re trying to get flamed in the reviews section of LowEndTalk.

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