Post Cactus

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277k ratings

See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
cooper-blogs
wheatley-blogs

I think most people just agree to the EULA without reading it because if you don’t agree then you can’t install the program, there’s no point to reading it if in order to install the program at hand you need to agree to the EULA anyway

plus those things are like 9 miles long

post-cactus

That’s pretty obvious, no doubt.

Of course, it’s always a good idea to read the EULA or TOS of whatever program or service you’re using at some point. Especially of those programs that you use very often. Just so you’re aware of what you can or can’t do, and what the company will or won’t do.

Imagine any guy getting a driver’s license and blindly agreeing to follow the rules of the road without knowing what they are.

Same idea. Hence, “End User License Agreement.”

If you don’t like the terms, then don’t use the software. That’s the point in reading it.

mod mod mod reblog

A PSA for those who want Tumblr to add a more restrictive blocking feature that prevents users from even viewing their blogs.

See, that’s not viable because there would have to be a a way to discern the blocked user from the thousands of people who view your PUBLIC blog. Sure, an IP ban can work, but that’s easily bypassed by using another device or using a proxy.

I mean, you could accept that yourblog.tumblr.com is on the public web that can be accessed by anyone regardless of your beliefs, but that’s too hard.

What Tumblr can do is make a visibility setting between public and private blogs. A login-only blog. People signed out of Tumblr are confronted with a log-in page and must sign in to see the page. If the user is on a blocked list or has no account, then the page won’t load and boom, you’re happy.

Of course, this can be worked around by making an account, and it makes your blog harder for other people to discover. But hey, that’s the idea.

Tumblr, hire me.

mod mod mod tumblr changes a thing