Remove the rule that Members could only post 2 bumping comments per
hour.
This was frequently misunderstood as meaning that Members could only
post 2 comments per hour. In fact, Members could post an unlimited
number of comments per hour, but the rest of their comments had to be
non-bumping. The error message we showed to users was misleading. Even
our own code misunderstood what this did when describing the config
option.
Gold users also weren't subject to this limit, which was unfair since
Gold users aren't any better at commenting than regular users. The fact
that a large number of users already ignored bump limits and nobody
really noticed indicates that the limit was unnecessary.
This option was originally added in issue #1747. But only ~350 users
ever disabled autocomplete, only ~120 of these were seen in the last
year, and only 9 new users who signed up in the last year disabled it.
Users wishing to disable autocomplete can use this CSS:
.ui-autocomplete { display: none !important: }
or this Javascript:
$("[data-autocomplete]").autocomplete("disable");
Remove the enable_post_navigation option. This option was originally
added to disable the next/prev post navbar beneath posts. It was later
repurposed to disable keyboard shortcuts.
Users who don't want keyboard shortcuts are advised to not press random
buttons on the keyboard like a caveman.
Only ~1200 users disabled this option and only ~600 were seen in the
last year.
Remove the enable_sequential_post_navigation option. This option was
used to disable the next/previous post navbar below posts.
This option was originally added in issue #674 because of people
complaining about the navbar when it was originally added. Also there
were complaints about URLs being uglier because of search params in the
URL (e.g. /posts/1234?q=touhou). There were also various minor bugs with
it at the time, such as keyboard shortcuts not working correctly, or the
page not remembering your search after a tag edit.
These complaints are irrelevant nowadays because a) people are used to
the navbar by now (and more often complain about it *not* being there
for order:score searches), b) post URLs always contain the search now,
this option hasn't disabled that for years, and c) the initial bugs with
it were fixed years ago.
Only ~1000 users disabled this option and only ~600 were seen in the last year.
Users still wishing to hide the search navbar can use custom CSS instead.
Add a Restricted user level. Restricted users are level 10, below
Members. New users start out as Restricted if they sign up from a proxy
or an IP recently used by another user.
Restricted users can't update or edit any public content on the site
until they verify their email address, at which point they're promoted
to Member. Restricted users are only allowed to do personal actions
like keep favorites, keep favgroups and saved searches, mark dmails as
read or deleted, or mark forum posts as read.
The restricted state already existed before, the only change here is
that now it's an actual user level instead of a hidden state. Before it
was based on two hidden flags on the user, the `requires_verification`
flag (set when a user signs up from a proxy, etc), and the `is_verified`
flag (set after the user verifies their email). Making it a user level
means that now the Restricted status will be shown publicly.
Introducing a new level below Member means that we have to change every
`is_member?` check to `!is_anonymous` for every place where we used
`is_member?` to check that the current user is logged in.
Require new accounts to verify their email address if any of the
following conditions are true:
* Their IP is a proxy.
* Their IP is under a partial IP ban.
* They're creating a new account while logged in to another account.
* Somebody recently created an account from the same IP in the last week.
Changes from before:
* Allow logged in users to view the signup page and create new accounts.
Creating a new account while logged in to your old account is now
allowed, but it requires email verification. This is a honeypot.
* Creating multiple accounts from the same IP is now allowed, but they
require email verification. Previously the same IP check was only for
the last day (now it's the last week), and only for an exact IP match
(now it's a subnet match, /24 for IPv4 or /64 for IPv6).
* New account verification is disabled for private IPs (e.g. 127.0.0.1,
192.168.0.1), to make development or running personal boorus easier
(fixes#4618).
Don't allow admins to bypass promotion restrictions by manually updating
user levels with a `PUT /users/:id` API call. Level changes have to go
through the /admin/users/:id/edit page.
Refactor models so that we define attribute API permissions in policy
files instead of directly in models.
This is cleaner because a) permissions are better handled by policies
and b) which attributes are visible to the API is an API-level concern
that models shouldn't have to care about.
This fixes an issue with not being able to precompile CSS/JS assets
unless the database was up and running. This was a problem when building
Docker images because we don't have a database at build time. We needed
the database because `api_attributes` was a class-level macro in some
places, which meant it ran at boot time, but this triggered a database
call because api_attributes used database introspection to get the list
of allowed API attributes.