Nahari Law

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Revision as of 16:14, 8 September 2023 by Megalomart (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Nahari law refers to a style of enforcing server rules that developed as a result of Nahari culture, it is a customary law system reliant heavily on server consensus and judicial precedent. Nahari law should not be confused with the server rules as Nahari law only refers to the method in which these rules are enforced. Unique characteristics of Nahari law are * Heavy Application of Rule 6 — Proponents of Nahari Law interpret ser...")
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Nahari law refers to a style of enforcing server rules that developed as a result of Nahari culture, it is a customary law system reliant heavily on server consensus and judicial precedent. Nahari law should not be confused with the server rules as Nahari law only refers to the method in which these rules are enforced.

Unique characteristics of Nahari law are

  • Heavy Application of Rule 6 — Proponents of Nahari Law interpret rule 6 liberally, taking it to mean that any disruption of another’s build or their ability to build is in breach. This is the most commonly cited rule in bans acting as a catch all to enforce server customs.
  • Light on rule 1 – Advocates of Nahari law believe exploits and dupes do not break rule 1 provided they are used solely for the purpose of technical redstone builds.
  • Holding Bans — Players are often banned for up to 24 hours if a flood of reports about their behaviour is received.
  • Vote Bans — Through citing rule 6, Nahari law effectively implements a vote ban system, wherein, if a majority of active players agree that a player damaging to the server overall, they will be banned.
  • Customary Law— Nahari law advocates that the official server rules should be as minimal as possible. Nahari law enforces server rules based on judicial precedent and server customs.
  • Strong Property Rights — A player may claim land even if they have no plans to develop it in the immediate future. If another player resides in your land the landlord is considered to own your property unless they specifically exempt themselves from this right
  • De-centralisation — Nahari law puts a heavy emphasis on local laws and will usually not rule on local affairs