On 3/1/23 10:30, Oskar Roesler wrote:

The TU's aren't judges in criminal court. It's totally ok and beneficial if 
they apply some pragmatism and common sense. Hell, even real court judges are 
allowed to vary in their decisionmaking. No, you're not discriminated because 
they stopped your reaction. I hope you can understand and accept that.

I understand. But I just don't get why I was banned. TU said this will be helpful to 
identify not complying packages. I just did that. It wasn't an automated script or 
something. And this is just requests, it is for TUs to make a decision. Unfortunately 
there is no "check" request type for simply bring attention, so I filled 
deletes.

Also I don't see any mentions about how much requests user can make. If you 
guys have problems with it, please share the limits publicly, e.g. on the wiki 
page.

P.S. Regarding common sense.
I will be glad if someone will explain how my package (libinput-light), which was created 
to drop libwacom dependency (How much users have wacom tablets? I think even 1% of the 
userbase will be generous overestimation.), considered harmful and deleted, but packages 
like https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/linux-slim stripped down to hell and literally 
stating "Zero compatibility" in the description are still alive for years?

TU's aren't judges, as you said, but I definitely want some justice here.

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