Toolserver:Rules

All users of the toolserver(s) are required to respect the following basic rules:


 * 1) You must subscribe to the toolserver-l mailing list (archive) or the toolserver-announce mailing list (archive) and are assumed to have read all postings to that list.
 * 2) Use of the toolservers must be related to the Wikimedia Foundation or one of its projects.  This rule will be strictly enforced as violations are an abuse of donated resources.  If you are at all unsure if something you want to do is appropriate, contact ts-admins first.
 * 3) All uses of the toolservers must be legal under Dutch, German, US and your local laws. Please be aware that "fair use" only exists in the USA, although other countries may have similar local laws.
 * 4) You must not run any process which may impact other networks. This includes (but is not limited to):
 * 5) * Port scanning or service scanning of any kind (e.g. nmap); security "auditing"; etc.
 * 6) * High-rate spidering/crawling or other requests to other sites without permission from the operator of that site.
 * 7) * If in doubt, ask first.
 * 8) Large web applications (e.g. phpMyAdmin, MediaWiki, etc.) may not be installed.
 * "Installation" here refers to making these available to the public.
 * See for clarification on this
 * 1) You are responsible for the security of all services you provide, including third-party software, or software of your own design.
 * Before making a service available, please check for security issues:
 * 1) Use of an account is limited to the person to which the account was issued.
 * You must not share your account with another user.
 * 1) Tools and scripts must not ask users to authenticate using account details from a Wikimedia wiki.
 * 2) Bots must operate according to the target wiki's regulations regarding bots.
 * Bots may not edit anonymously.
 * You have to add a line at the bot-userpage, that the bot runs at the toolserver.
 * Blocks placed on errant bots may affect other users of the toolserver.
 * 1) Tools may not serve significant portions of wiki page text to clients.  "Significant" means distributing actual page content; for example, installing MediaWiki to serve the text of wikis would not be allowed, but showing a short extract to provide context for a tool would be okay.

Your actions and the contents of your home and public_html directories may be reviewed by administrators on a periodic basis to ensure compliance with these rules.

User accounts may be closed by any administrator without notice for violation of any of these rules (this applies particularly to #2 and #3) or for any other reason. If you have any reason to suspect that your use of the toolserver is not legitimate, ask first. The toolserver is not a wiki and excuses such as "the rules didn't say I can't do this" will be ignored. Accounts closed for rules violations will not be reopened except in extraordinary circumstances. You cannot abuse the toolserver and expect to keep your account because you apologise afterwards.