website/web/templates/faq.html
2022-09-07 23:03:15 -07:00

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{{define "title"}}Frequently Asked Questions{{end}}
{{define "content"}}
<div class="block">
<section class="hero is-light is-bold">
<div class="hero-body">
<div class="container">
<h1 class="title">Frequently Asked Questions</h1>
<h2 class="subtitle">And some that nobody asked</h2>
</div>
</div>
</section>
</div>
<div class="block p-4">
<div class="content">
<h1>General FAQs</h1>
<h3>What does certification mean, and what is a "verification selfie"?</h3>
<p>
This website requires all members to be "certified" or proven to be real human beings
on the other side of the keyboard. A "verification selfie" is where you take a picture
of yourself holding onto a hand-written note on a sheet of paper to prove that you are
a real person (and not just catfishing with somebody else's stolen photos).
</p>
<p>
Certification helps protect our members from harassment by anonymous trolls or automated
spam robots that plague other similar sites.
</p>
<h3>Do I need to send a "verification selfie"?</h3>
<p>
Yes.
</p>
<p>
Certification is required before you can gain access to the greater community on this
website. Pre-certification, you may only access your own profile page and settings, but
can not browse the member list, see the site Photo Gallery, or participate on the forums
until your profile has been certified.
</p>
<h3>What can non-certified members do?</h3>
<p>
Before you have an approved certification photo, you can mainly only access and edit your
own profile page, and upload a few pictures while you await approval. Your pictures won't
be shown to members on the Site Gallery until you're certified, and most of the website's
features (namely, the Forums, Site Gallery and Member Search Directory) are gated behind
certification.
</p>
<p>
Certified members may, at their own discretion, be able to find your profile page by
browsing the Member Directory. They may send you a friend request or reach out to you.
Or, if you happen to know a member's profile URL on this site, you (the non-certified
member) can view their profile page and photo gallery (depending on their privacy
settings), send them a friend request or direct message. But basically, it will be
difficult to discover users to interact with until after you are certified - and
this is intentional to help guard against spam bots and creepy people.
</p>
<h3>What are the visibility options for my profile page?</h3>
<p>
There are currently three different choices for your profile visibility on your
<a href="/settings">Settings</a> page:
</p>
<ul>
<li>
The <strong>default</strong> visibility is <strong class="has-text-success-dark">"Public + Login Required."</strong> Users must be
logged-in to an account in order to see anything about your profile page - if an
external (logged out) browser visits your profile URL, they will be redirected to
log in to an account first.
</li>
<li>
You may optionally go <em>more</em> public with a <strong class="has-text-warning-dark">"Limited Logged-out View."</strong>
This enables your profile URL (e.g.,
{{if .LoggedIn}}<a href="/u/{{.CurrentUser.Username}}?view=external">/u/{{.CurrentUser.Username}}</a>{{else}}/u/username{{end}})
to show a <em>basic</em> page (with your square profile picture and display name) to
logged-out browsers. This may be useful if you wish to link to your page from an external
site (e.g. your Twitter page) and present new users with a better experience than just
a redirect to login page.
</li>
<li>
You may <strong class="has-text-private">"Mark my profile as 'private'"</strong> to
be private even from other logged-in members who are not on your Friends
list. Logged-in users will see only your square profile picture and display
name, and be able only to send you a friend request or a message.
</li>
</ul>
<h1>Photo FAQs</h1>
<h3>Do I have to post my nudes here?</h3>
<p>
You must be comfortable with doing so, yes. On some other nudist social websites, many
nudists have lamented to me about how often they get messages by anonymous, faceless
profiles who slide into their DMs and get all pervy and weird on them. While
{{PrettyTitle}} only requires a face pic and verification selfie, other members will
feel more comfortable if you post some of your own nudes as well.
</p>
<h3>Do I have to include my face in my nudes?</h3>
<p>
You don't have to! I know many nudists are not comfortable with their face appearing
in their nudes. You are free to post "headless torso shots" or leave your face
covered or censored. But you should have at least one face pic (as your default profile
pic) - it can be a G-rated selfie!
</p>
<p>
If you're only comfortable with posting like close-up dick pics, please mark those pics
as "explicit" -- many nudists prefer to see the <em>whole</em> nude body and don't
want to see just dick pics everywhere. And don't set those as your default profile pic!
</p>
<h3>What appears on the Site Gallery?</h3>
<p>
The "<strong><i class="fa fa-image"></i> Gallery</strong>" link on the site nav bar goes to the Site-wide
Photo Gallery page. Here is shown all of the <strong>public</strong> photos uploaded by
all (certified) users, if those pictures are also opted-in to appear on the Gallery in
their settings.
</p>
<p>
If you have friends on here, you may also see their "Friends-only" photos on the Site
Gallery. This way, you don't miss any updates if your friends add a new picture (so
long as they allow their picture to appear on the Gallery).
</p>
<p>
When you upload a picture you may opt it in or out of the Gallery by checking a box on
its settings page. For example, you can upload a Public photo but opt it <em>out</em> of
the Gallery -- it will then only appear on your profile page.
</p>
<h3>What is considered "explicit" in photos?</h3>
<p>
On this website, I make a fairly common distinction between what's a "normal nude" and
what's an "explicit" photo:
</p>
<ul>
<li>
"Normal nudes" are completely non-sexual in nature. If there's a penis, it's not
erect and it's not being grabbed. "Normal nudes" are not close-up pictures that
focus on the genitals, but tend to be full body shots of a non-sexual nature.
</li>
<li>
"Explicit" posts are everything else: if it includes an erection, or you're
grabbing your junk, or flashing your various holes, or masturbating or engaging
in a sexual activity, these all fall under the "explicit" umbrella. If one would
reasonably consider it to be porn, it's explicit.
</li>
</ul>
<p>
You are permitted to upload explicit content to your profile, just mark which pictures
are explicit to help the rest of the community in case someone prefers not to see that.
You can enable a setting on your profile if you are comfortable with seeing explicit
content from other users -- by default this site is "normal nudes" friendly!
</p>
<h3>Does this site prevent people from downloading my pictures?</h3>
<p>
This website does not go out of its way to prevent people from downloading pictures, and
nor will it pretend to. This is actually a very difficult problem to solve in the year {{.YYYY}}.
</p>
<p>
I <em>could</em> add some JavaScripts that prevent right-clicking on my pages so you can't
just "Save image as," but this would only deter desktop (mouse &amp; keyboard) users and is easy
to work around. I <em>could</em> place a transparent image over top of all your pictures like
Instagram does and if you try and save it, you just get a one-pixel transparent GIF; but this
is trivially defeated by any novice web designer by just right-clicking, "Inspect element" and
deleting it from the web page to get at the photo it was protecting.
</p>
<p>
And people can always just screenshot the whole web page - and a web page can't do anything
at all to prevent that. With mobile phones this is an especially easy and common thing to
do. Any mild measures this site could take to deter downloading would only provide a false
sense of security, which is worse than having no security.
</p>
<p>
There are risks inherent with putting a picture on the Internet. This website does provide
some controls you can utilize as to <em>who</em> will see the pictures you upload:
</p>
<ul>
<li>
You can mark pictures as "Friends only" and only approved friendships you make on this
website will be able to see those pictures.
</li>
<li>
You may mark some pictures as "Private" and you grant access to your private photos on
a per-person basis, and can revoke access to one or all at any time.
</li>
<li>
This website also chooses utterly random URLs for each and every picture, with no
correlation between the square cropped and full size versions, so users should only
be able to discover pictures through the normal front-end of this website, subject
to your privacy controls.
</li>
</ul>
<p>
Note that your square cropped Default Profile Picture that appears next to your username
on various parts of this website is always visible to logged-in user accounts. The "full size"
version may be Friends-only or Private, but the square crop that you chose for your Profile
Picture is currently displayed to all logged-in users.
</p>
<p>
Additionally, your Profile Page altogether can <em>only</em> be seen by logged-in members
of this site by default. You <em>may</em> tighten it further and mark your entire profile
as Private (and only approved friends can see your profile or <em>any</em> of your photos).
Note that your square cropped profile picture is still visible even so.
</p>
<p>
Or if you are feeling very bold, you may mark your profile to have a "limited logged-out
view" if you want to share your profile link on another website such as Twitter. A logged-out
user will see only your Display Name and square cropped profile picture, and be invited to
sign up for {{PrettyTitle}} to contact you here.
</p>
<h1>Forum FAQs</h1>
<h3>What do the various badges on the forum mean?</h3>
<p>
You may see some of these badges on the forums or their posts. These are their meanings:
</p>
<ul>
<li>
<span class="tag is-danger is-light">
<span class="icon"><i class="fa fa-fire"></i></span>
<span>Explicit</span>
</span> -
on a forum it means the entire forum is "<abbr title="Not Safe For Work">NSFW</abbr>";
but individual topics within an otherwise non-explicit forum may also opt in to the
Explicit tag if its content is border-line. You will not see any Explicit forums or
posts unless you opt-in to see explicit content in your <a href="/settings">settings</a>.
</li>
<li>
<span class="tag is-warning is-light">
<span class="icon"><i class="fa fa-gavel"></i></span>
<span>Privileged</span>
</span> -
only a forum's moderators can create new topics in a Privileged forum (such as the
forum for Site Announcements). Moderators include the site admins, the creator of
the forum, and any additional moderators appointed by the forum creator.
</li>
<li>
<span class="tag is-success is-light">
<span class="icon"><i class="fa fa-thumbtack"></i></span>
<span>Pinned</span>
</span> -
these forum posts are pinned to the top of a forum, appearing above regular posts
on the first page of the forum.
</li>
<li>
<span class="tag is-warning is-light">
<span class="icon"><i class="fa fa-ban"></i></span>
<span>No Reply</span>
</span> -
topics with this badge can not accept any new replies. Some types of announcement
posts may start with this badge from the beginning; other threads that are locked
by a moderator may gain this badge if the conversation was going off the rails.
</li>
</ul>
<h3>Can I create my own forums?</h3>
<p>
This feature is coming soon! Users will be allowed to create their own forums and
act as moderator within their own board. The forum admin pages need a bit more
spit &amp; polish before it's ready!
</p>
<p>
Some related features with managing your own forums will include:
</p>
<ul>
<li>
You'll be able to make your forum "invite-only" if you want, where only approved
members can see and reply to threads.
</li>
<li>
You'll be able to choose other users to help you moderate your forum. As the forum
owner, you'll retain admin control of your forum unless you assign ownership away
to another member.
</li>
</ul>
<h1>Technical FAQs</h1>
<h3>Why did you build a custom website?</h3>
<p>
Other variants on this question might be: why not just run a
<a href="https://joinmastodon.org" target="_blank">Mastodon</a> instance? Or why
this website and not a Discord server or MeWe group or <em>insert off-the-shelf
free software or hosted web service here</em>?
</p>
<p>
It certainly would've been simpler to just use an off-the-shelf open source app
such as Mastodon (a decentralized, Twitter-like app) or similar. These apps though
have a scalability problem: users with their infinitely long timelines will upload
infinite photos until your server runs out of disk space and not enough of them may
donate to cover the costs. And the Fediverse feature (Mastodon is like e-mail and
users from all servers can like, follow and comment on one another across the entire
network) is a double edged sword too: all my members would need to tag even their
"normal nudes" as NSFW or else other servers would ban ours (meaning we have to follow
rules imposed by the wider Internet community), and conversely it is difficult to
moderate incoming content from other servers showing up on my users' timelines.
It's not a good fit for the vision I had in mind.
</p>
<p>
And on just using a service like Discord or MeWe to host my community: that's still
putting us in the hands of a corporation which can one day decide to ban all NSFW
users. Many people run nudist Discords and MeWe groups, but I needed something whose
fate is kept in my own hands.
</p>
<h3>Is this website open source?</h3>
<p>
Yes! The source code for this website is released as free software under the GNU
General Public License. It is programmed in Go and the source code is available
at <a href="https://code.nonshy.com/nonshy/website" target="_blank">code.nonshy.com/nonshy/website</a>.
If you're a developer and would like to contribute bug fixes or new features to
the website, see details <a href="https://code.nonshy.com/nonshy/website/src/branch/main/CONTRIBUTING.md" target="_blank">here</a>.
</p>
</div>
</div>
{{end}}