Look, I met someone from another country. Since my country is diverse, I knew how to greet them, but Chess.com took that as an offence. I had no idea that greeting in different languages was banned. Once, I came across another fellow who used the same word to greet me, and there was nothing wrong with it; neither did he get muted. When I used the exact phrase, I got muted! I think this is unfair, and most importantly, I heard there is a specific set of words that are blacklisted by Chess.com, right? But when I faced someone from my own country who used wrong words, he never got banned! The difference was that maybe Chess.com couldn't detect it, but I could because it was in my language. Actually, I'm a bit freaked out (scared if this word isn't allowed to). I never got MUTED and just curious. Please take this as a query, and I don't have any wrong intentions. Thank you for the support, help, and thanks, Chess.com, for the amazing platform!!!
So which is it? You got muted or you never got muted?
Look, I met someone from another country. Since my country is diverse, I knew how to greet them, but Chess.com took that as an offence. I had no idea that greeting in different languages was banned. Once, I came across another fellow who used the same word to greet me, and there was nothing wrong with it; neither did he get muted. When I used the exact phrase, I got muted! I think this is unfair, and most importantly, I heard there is a specific set of words that are blacklisted by Chess.com, right? But when I faced someone from my own country who used wrong words, he never got banned! The difference was that maybe Chess.com couldn't detect it, but I could because it was in my language. Actually, I'm a bit freaked out (scared if this word isn't allowed to). I never got MUTED and just curious. Please take this as a query, and I don't have any wrong intentions. Thank you for the support, help, and thanks, Chess.com, for the amazing platform!!!