The Curriculum

The Curriculum

Introduction

111: Your Responsibilities as a Moderator

You may already know by now that you can report content to Discord's Trust & Safety team if it breaks Discord's Community Guidelines or Terms of Service. However, while moderating a server you may come across situations where you are unsure of whether you should make a report or not. This article will give you a good idea of what sorts of things are reportable, and what things are not worth reporting. Knowing this will help you decide what content needs to be moderated by your moderation team, and what content should be escalated to Trust & Safety. Wherever it is mentioned that an issue should be handled on a server level, it is for the most part implied, but not required, that the server should consider punishing users who participate in the given behavior.

If you do not know how to properly report content to Discord, see article 104, which explains it in detail.

Discord Community Guidelines - A Breakdown

The Discord Community Guidelines may seem to indicate exactly what content you should report to Trust & Safety, but interpretation of the rules may not always be that simple. The Community Guidelines are shown below with an explanation on when it is appropriate to report the situations described by each of the 18 guidelines in gray.

Here are some rules for interacting with others:

Do not organize, participate in, or encourage harassment of others. Disagreements happen and are normal, but continuous, repetitive, or severe negative comments may cross the line into harassment and are not okay.

  • Disagreements, insults, and other rude or disrespectful behavior is common, and should generally be handled in accordance with your own server rules. Usually these situations can be resolved with proper moderator action from server staff or asking victims to block offending users. However, if all possible measures have been taken on a server and user level to stop the behavior, and the behavior persists, (e.g., by means of ban evasion and alt account creation) then a Trust & Safety report is warranted (see guideline four).
  • Do not organize, promote, or coordinate servers around hate speech. It’s unacceptable to attack a person or a community based on attributes such as their race, ethnicity, national origin, sex, gender, sexual orientation, religious affiliation, or disabilities.
  • If a user is participating in any of these actions aimed at another person or community, it is usually reportable. Some examples of usage of hate speech or slurs that should not be reported are meta talk about hate speech/slurs or relevant quotes containing hate speech/slurs. These situations are up to the server to moderate as you see fit.
  • Do not make threats of violence or threaten to harm others. This includes indirect threats, as well as sharing or threatening to share someone’s private personal information (also known as doxxing).
  • If a user is at risk due to a threat made by another user, they should be reported. If the threat seems immediate, the affected user should call their local authorities and escalate the issue to law enforcement along with being reported. It is important to recognize, however, when a threat may not be truly dangerous. Users may joke about this topic, and mean no real harm. It is your job as a moderator to communicate with those involved to determine if a user is truly in danger.
  • Do not evade user blocks or server bans. Do not send unwanted, repeated friend requests or messages, especially after they’ve made it clear they don’t want to talk to you anymore. Do not try to hide your identity in an attempt to contact someone who has blocked you, or otherwise circumvent the tools we have which enable users to protect themselves.
  • If a user is evading blocks or bans for the purpose of repeating their previous bad behavior, they should be reported. Users who evade a block or ban and do not continue bad behavior should not be reported, but you may choose to discipline users who do so on a server level if you prefer. The differentiation here is determining if their actions are maliciously directed towards others.
  • Do not send others viruses or malware, attempt to phish others, or hack or DDoS them.
  • Viruses, malware, and phishing attacks are reportable as this content is directly against Discord’s Community Guidelines. Rumors of users who are deemed hackers are not reportable in any way, unless valid evidence of their behavior is included.

Here are some rules for content on Discord:

You must apply the NSFW label to channels if there is adult content in that channel. Any content that cannot be placed in an age-gated channel, such as avatars, server banners, and invite splashes, may not contain adult content.

  • Isolated incidents where NSFW content is posted outside of an NSFW channel should be taken care of on a server level. If a server regularly fails to remove NSFW content posted outside of NSFW channels, the server may be reported for this behavior. Other NSFW content outside of age-gated channels, such as the content described in this guideline, may also be reported.
  • You may not sexualize minors in any way. This includes sharing content or links which depict minors in a pornographic, sexually suggestive, or violent manner, and includes illustrated or digitally altered pornography that depicts minors (such as lolicon, shotacon, or cub). We report illegal content to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.
  • Content with minors being sexualized is taken very seriously and should be reported and removed as soon as possible. Be aware that some borderline content may be more subjective in terms of whether the depicted content involves minors or not. In this case, this includes material where the content reported as being of the “sexualized” nature is ambiguous or hard to definitively identify as such.
  • You may not share sexually explicit content of other people without their consent, or share or promote sharing of non-consensual intimate imagery (also known as revenge porn) in an attempt to shame or degrade someone.
  • The above content should always be reported to Discord’s Trust & Safety team.
  • You may not share content that glorifies or promotes suicide or self-harm, including any encouragement to others to cut themselves, or embrace eating disorders such as anorexia or bulimia.
  • Small, one time offenses, or users who talk about self-harm in reference to themselves should be handled on a server level. Users who continue to promote self-harm either for themselves or others should be reported.  Users who are in physical danger due to a potential suicide attempt or self-harm should be reported as soon as possible. You should consider calling law enforcement if you believe the user may be in imminent danger to themselves or others.
  • You may not share images of sadistic gore or animal cruelty.
  • You may not use Discord for the organization, promotion, or support of violent extremism.
  • The above content should always be reported. Violent extremism is any content that supports extreme religious or political views that potentially put other people in danger. This content is typically encapsulated by the behavior described in guidelines one and three.
  • You may not operate a server that sells or facilitates the sales of prohibited or potentially dangerous goods. This includes firearms, ammunition, drugs, and controlled substances.
  • Servers that do this should always be reported to Discord’s Trust & Safety Team.
  • You may not promote, distribute, or provide access to content involving the hacking, cracking, or distribution of pirated software or stolen accounts. This includes sharing or selling cheats or hacks that may negatively affect others in multiplayer games.
  • Users or servers that are involved in the above should be reported if there is significant evidence to prove that they are involved, such as explicit distribution of any of the above items or services. Users who talk about the topic but aren't clearly involved should be handled by the server.
  • In general, you should not promote, encourage or engage in any illegal behavior. This is very likely to get you kicked off Discord, and may get you reported to law enforcement.
  • Most common cases involving illegal behavior are covered in other guidelines. If you encounter illegal behavior not covered in the other guidelines which could potentially pose a serious threat, it should be reported. If a user jokes about illegal behavior or does not appear to be involved in illegal behavior, you may consider handling the situation on a server level.

Finally, we ask that you respect Discord itself:

You may not sell your account or your server.

  • Users who want to buy or sell an account or server should be reported. Again, try to be sure they are serious about it before reporting.
  • You may not use self-bots or user-bots to access Discord.
  • Users who use a self-bot or user-bot in a malicious way should be reported.Self-botting in this case includes users setting up a bot or automations that allow them to perform actions on Discord faster than any human is physically capable of. Discord prioritizes reports of self-bots where there is some malicious behavior, such as nitro-sniping or data collection.
  • You may not share content that violates anyone's intellectual property or other rights.
  • In general, this guideline should be handled by the users involved, usually by means of a DMCA request. Instructions on properly filing a DMCA takedown request can be found in Discord’s Terms of Service, and must be initiated by the rights-holder of the intellectual property or an authorized representative. You may handle these situations on a server level if you wish.
  • You may not spam Discord, especially our Customer Support and Trust & Safety teams. Making false and malicious reports, sending multiple reports about the same issue, or asking a group of users to all report the same content may lead to action being taken on your account.
  • If you have evidence of users participating in this behavior, you should report it. Users impersonating Discord employees may also fall in this category. When submitting a report ticket about an issue, reply to the support ticket to bump it, but do not create a new ticket as you may end up violating this community guideline.

Extra Considerations

There are some things you might encounter that are not explicitly mentioned in the community guidelines. Here is a short list of some common situations that you might encounter while on Discord:

  • Bot Advertisements/Solicitations - If a bot is being used to advertise/solicit, you should report the bot. This is most commonly done in DMs.
  • User Advertisements/Solicitations - Users can be reported for advertising and soliciting in DMs as well. However, if a user is advertising in a server, they should be dealt with on a server level, provided they are not advertising something that breaks another community guideline.
  • Discord Nitro Scams - Any scams being spread about getting free Discord Nitro or server boosts should be reported if they contain a potentially malicious link, or if being spread by a bot. If you see any messages that claim to give users Discord Nitro or server boosts through other means, such as putting a command in the console, you may handle those cases on a server level. It is recommended, however, that you remove these messages swiftly, as it is likely a ploy to get users to reveal their account token, which can give other users access to their account.
  • Chain Mail - You may encounter messages that are created to scare users and spread rapidly. Common phrases in these messages are "Look out for Discord user ____" or anything claiming a user or bot might DDoS you or steal your IP. These messages will usually say they were written by Discord as a scare tactic. This is not true. Any important messages from Discord will be posted on their social media, or in a system message and nowhere else. System messages are identifiable by the system tag seen next to the user that sends them. Any chain mail sent is not reportable, but should be dealt with on a server level. It is recommended that you delete these messages and inform users that they are fake.

Conclusion

This is not an exhaustive list of the situations you may encounter as a moderator, nor is it a guide for what rules you should enforce on your server, as the platform is ever-evolving. You may enforce extra rules as you see fit in order to cultivate the type of community you want for your server. To learn more about creating server rules, see article 203 of the Discord Moderation Academy. However, integral to being able to continue to grow your server is the understanding that you need to report and remove content that breaks Discord’s Community Guidelines from your server as necessary. Leaving content that breaks the Community Guidelines can result in action being taken on your server if it becomes a space that enables harmful behavior.

Characteristic
Add Verified Role
Remove Unverified Role
Bypassing the server verification level
Users will be subject to the server verification level until they verify.
Users will not be subject to the server verification level on joining, but will be after they verify.
Role Permissions
The @everyone role should have no permissions, the Verified role should have the permissions you would normally give to @everyone.
The @everyone role should have normal permissions. The Unverified role should have no permissions.
Channel Permissions
Separate instructional & verification channels

@everyone role

✔ Read Messages in both channels

❌ Add Reactions in both channels
✔ Read Message History in instructional

❌ Send Messages in instructional

✔ Send Messages in verification
❌ Read Message History in verification

Verified role

❌ Read Messages in both channels

❌ Add Reactions in both channels

Combined channel
@everyone role

✔ Read Messages
✔ Read Message History

✔ Send Messages

❌ Add Reactions

Verified role

❌ Read Messages

❌ Add Reactions
Separate instructional & verification channels

@everyone role

✔ Read Messages in both channels

❌ Add Reactions in both channels
✔ Read Message History in instructional

❌ Send Messages in instructional

✔ Send Messages in verification
❌ Read Message History in verification

Verified role

❌ Read Messages in both channels

❌ Add Reactions in both channels

Combined channel
@everyone role

✔ Read Messages
✔ Read Message History*

✔ Send Messages

❌ Add Reactions

Verified role

❌ Read Messages

❌ Add Reactions

*Unless you are using the channel description for verification instructions rather than an automatic greeter message.

If you want to use the remove unverified role method, you will need a bot that can automatically assign a role to a user when they join.

Verification Actions
Once you decide whether you want to add or remove a role, you need to decide how you want that action to take place. Generally, this is done by typing a bot command in a channel, typing a bot command in a DM, or clicking on a reaction. The differences between these methods are shown below.

Characteristic
Interview
Click Reaction
Command in Channel
Command in DM
Ease of use
Requires the most effort from both moderators and users
Simple to perform, cannot mistype anything
More complex, users must read and type more carefully
Interaction with Server Verification Level
Users subject to server verification level (if using the Verified role method)
Users not subject to server verification level
Effectiveness
Extremely effective at deterring trolls from reaching the rest of the server
Users do not need to read instructions/rules as closely to understand what to do
Encourages users to read the verification message carefully
Encourages users to read the verification message carefully, but DM may not go through
Visibility
Moderators are directly involved
Moderators are unlikely to notice user action.
User action is visible to moderators
User action is not visible to moderators
Simplicity of setup
While the involvement of bots may be minimal, writing interview questions and determining evaluation criteria could be complex
Requires only a single #welcome type channel with instructions to click the reaction
Can require either only a single channel or two channels depending on preference
Does not require any channels, unless you want a backup verification method for users that have DMs disabled

In order to use the command in channel method, you will need to instruct your users to remove the Unverified role or to add the Verified role to themselves.

Element
Description
Title
The text that is placed above the description, usually highlighted. Also directs to a URL, if given.
Description
The part of the embed where most of the text is contained.
Content
The message content outside the embed.
URL
The link to the address of the webpage. Mostly used with the thumbnail, icon and author elements in order to link to an image.
Color
Color of your embed’s border, usually in hexadecimal or decimal.
Timestamp
Time that the embed was posted. Located next to the footer.
Footer
Text at the bottom of the embed.
Thumbnail
A medium-sized image in the top right corner of the embed.
Image
A large-sized image located below the “Description” element.
Author
Adds the author block to the embed, always located at the top of the embed.
Icon
An icon-sized image in the top left corner of the embed, next to the “Author” element. This is usually used to represent an Author icon.
Fields
Allows you to add multiple subtitles with additional content underneath them below the main “Title” & “Description” blocks.
Inline
Allows you to put multiple fields in the same row, rather than having one per row.

Markdown is also supported in an embed. Here is an image to showcase an example of these properties:

Example image to showcase the elements of an embed
An important thing to note is that embeds also have their limitations, which are set by the API. Here are some of the most important ones you need to know:

An important thing to note is that embeds also have their limitations, which are set by the API. Here are some of the most important ones you need to know:

  • Embed titles are limited to 256 characters
  • Embed descriptions are limited to 2048 characters
  • There can be up to 25 fields
  • The name of a field is limited to 256 characters and its value to 1024 characters
  • The footer text is limited to 2048 characters
  • The author name is limited to 256 characters
  • In addition, the sum of all characters in an embed structure must not exceed 6000 characters
  • A webhook can have 10 embeds per message
  • A webhook can only send 30 messages per minute

If you feel like experimenting even further you should take a look at the full list of limitations provided by Discord here.

It’s very important to keep in mind that when you are writing an embed, it should be in JSON format. Some bots even provide an embed visualizer within their dashboards. You can also use this embed visualizer tool which provides visualization for bot and webhook embeds.

Hypothesis
Chart/Table Affected
Expected Result
Removing invite links from less relevant traffic sources will decrease server growth.
  • How many new members are joining?
  • Total membership over time
  • Most popular invites/referrers
  • New members joining decreases
  • Total membership over time grows more slowly or decreases
  • Total joins from the invite link/referrer decreases
Adding or promoting an invite link on a relevant traffic source will increase server growth
  • How many new members are joining?
  • Total membership over time
  • Most popular invites/referrers
  • New members joining increases
  • Total membership over time increases more quickly or decreases more slowly
  • Total joins from the invite link/referrer increases
Improving the overall quality of referrers will attract people that are more likely to stay on your server and engage with your community
  • Server leaves over time
  • How many new members successfully activate on their first day?
  • Members remain on your server after joining, decreasing server leaves over time from new members
  • Members are more likely to want to engage with your server prior to joining, and will be more likely to talk or visit multiple channels
Webhooks
Bots
Function
  • Can only send messages to a set channel.
  • They can only send messages, not view any.
  • Can send up to 10 embeds per message.
  • Much more flexible as they can do more complex actions similar to what a regular user can do.
  • Bots are able to view and send messages.
  • Only one embed per message is allowed.
Customization
  • Can create 10 webhooks per server  with the ability to customize each avatar and name.
  • Able to hyperlink any text outside of an embed.
  • Public bots often have a preset avatar and name which cannot be modified by end users.
  • Cannot hyperlink any text in a normal message, must use an embed.
Load and security
  • Just an endpoint to send data to, no actual hosting is required.
  • No authentication that data sent to webhook is from a trusted source.
  • No authentication that data sent to webhook is from a trusted source.If webhook URL is leaked, only non-permanent problems may occur (e.g. spamming)
  • Easy to change webhook URL if needed.
  • Bots have to be hosted in a secure environment that will need to be kept online all the time, which costs more resources.
  • Bots are authenticated via a token, compromised token can cause severe damage due to their capabilities if they have permissions granted to them by the server owner.
  • However, you can reset the bot token if needed.

Even though this comparison is important for better understanding of both bots and webhooks, it does not mean you should limit yourself to only picking one or the other. Sometimes, bots and webhooks work their best when working together. It’s not uncommon for bots to use webhooks for logging purposes or to distinguish notable messages with a custom avatar and name for that message. Both tools are essential for a server to function properly and make for a powerful combination.

Spam Type
Mee6
Dyno
Giselle
Gaius
YAGPDB
Carl
Gearbot
Fast Messages
No
Yes
Yes****
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Repeated Text
Yes
Yes
Yes****
Yes
Yes
No
No
Newline Text
No
No
Yes****
Yes
No
No
No
Mentions
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes*
Links
Yes*
Yes*
Yes*
Yes
Yes***
Yes
Yes
Invites
Yes*
Yes*
Yes*
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Images
No
Yes
Yes
Yes**
No
Yes
No
Emoji
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
No
No
No

*Unconfigurable filters, these will catch all instances of the trigger, regardless of whether they’re spammed or a single instance

**Gaius also offers an additional NSFW filter as well as standard image spam filtering

***YAGPDB offers link verification via google, anything flagged as unsafe can be removed

****Giselle combines Fast Messages and Repeated Text into one filter

Anti-Spam is integral to running a large private server, or a public server. Spam, by definition, is irrelevant or unsolicited messages. This covers a wide base of things on Discord, there are multiple types of spam a user can engage in. The common forms are listed in the table above. The most common forms of spam are also very typical of raids, those being Fast Messages and Repeated Text. The nature of spam can vary greatly but the vast majority of instances involve a user or users sending lots of messages with the same contents with the intent of disrupting your server.

There are subsets of this spam that many anti-spam filters will be able to catch. If any of the following: Mentions, Links, Invites, Emoji, and Newline Text are spammed repeatedly in one message or spammed repeatedly across several messages, they will provoke most Repeated Text and Fast Messages filters appropriately. Subset filters are still a good thing for your anti-spam filter to contain as you may wish to punish more or less harshly depending on the spam. Namely, Emoji and Links may warrant separate punishments. Spamming 10 links in a single message is inherently worse than having 10 emoji in a message.

Anti-spam will only act on these things contextually, usually in an X in Y fashion where if a user sends, for example, 10 links in 5 seconds, they will be punished to some degree. This could be 10 links in one message, or 1 link in 10 messages. In this respect, some anti-spam filters can act simultaneously as Fast Messages and Repeated Text filters.

Sometimes, spam may happen too quickly for a bot to catch up. There are rate limits in place to stop bots from harming servers that can prevent deletion of individual messages if those messages are being sent too quickly. This can often happen in raids. As such, Fast Messages filters should prevent offenders from sending messages; this can be done via a mute, kick or ban. If you want to protect your server from raids, please read on to the Anti-Raid section of this article.

Text Filters
Text filters allow you to control the types of words and/or links that people are allowed to put in your server. Different bots will provide various ways to filter these things, keeping your chat nice and clean.

FIlter
Mee6
Dyno
Giselle
Gaius
YAGPDB
Carl
Gearbot
Banned words
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Whitelist
No
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Templates
No
Yes
No
Yes
No
No
No
Immunity
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Banned Links
Yes*
Yes*
No
Yes
Yes*
Yes***
Yes
Whitelist
Yes
No
No
Yes
Yes**
Yes***
Yes
Templates
No
No
No
Yes
Yes**
Yes***
No
InvitesNo
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Extras
Zalgo
Selfbot
Regex
Regex
Files
No

*Defaults to banning ALL links

**YAGPDB offers link verification via google, anything flagged as unsafe can be removed

***Setting a catch-all filter with carl will prevent link-specific spam detection

A text filter is integral to a well moderated server. It’s strongly, strongly recommended you use a bot that can filter text based on a blacklist. A Banned words filter can catch links and invites provided http:// and https:// are added to the word blacklist (for all links) or specific full site URLs to block individual websites. In addition, discord.gg can be added to a blacklist to block ALL Discord invites.

A Banned Words filter is integral to running a public server, especially if it’s a Partnered, Community or Verified server, as this level of auto moderation is highly recommended for the server to adhere to the additional guidelines attached to it. Before configuring a filter, it’s a good idea to work out what is and isn’t ok to say in your server, regardless of context. For example, racial slurs are generally unacceptable in almost all servers, regardless of context. Banned word filters often won’t account for context, with an explicit blacklist. For this reason, it’s also important a robust filter also contains whitelisting options. For example, if you add the slur ‘nig’ to your filter and someone mentions the country Nigeria’ they could get in trouble for using an otherwise acceptable word.

Filter immunity may also be important to your server, as there may be individuals who need to discuss the use of banned words, namely members of a moderation team. There may also be channels that allow the usage of otherwise banned words. For example, a serious channel dedicated to discussion of real world issues may require discussions about slurs or other demeaning language, in this exception channel based Immunity is integral to allowing those conversations.

Link filtering is important to servers where sharing links in ‘general’ chats isn’t allowed, or where there are specific channels for sharing such things. This can allow a server to remove links with an appropriate reprimand without treating a transgression with the same severity as they would a user sending a racial slur.

Whitelisting/Blacklisting and templates for links are also a good idea to have. While many servers will use catch-all filters to make sure links stay in specific channels, some links will always be malicious. As such, being able to filter specific links is a good feature, with preset filters (Like the google filter provided by YAGPDB) coming in very handy for protecting your user base without intricate setup however, it is recommended you do configure a custom filter to ensure specific slurs, words etc. that break the rules of your server, aren’t being said.

Invite filtering is equally important in large or public servers where users will attempt to raid, scam or otherwise assault your server with links with the intention of manipulating your user base to join or where unsolicited self-promotion is potentially fruitful. Filtering allows these invites to be recognized, and dealt with more harshly. Some bots may also allow by-server white/blacklisting allowing you to control which servers are ok to share invites to, and which aren’t. A good example of invite filtering usage would be something like a partners channel, where invites to other, closely linked, servers are shared. These servers should be added to an invite whitelist to prevent their deletion.

Anti-Raid
Raids, as defined earlier in this article, are mass-joins of users (often selfbots) with the intent of damaging your server. There are a few methods available to you in order for you to protect your community from this behavior. One method involves gating your server with verification appropriately, as discussed in DMA 301.You can also supplement or supplant the need for verification by using a bot that can detect and/or prevent damage from raids.

Mee6
Dyno
Giselle
Gaius
YAGPDB
Carl
Gearbot
Raid detection
No
No
Yes
No*
No
No
No
Raid prevention
No
No
Yes
Yes
No
No
No
Raid-user detection
No
No
Yes
Yes
No
No
No
Damage prevention
No
Yes
No
Yes*
No
Yes
No
Templates
No
No
No
Yes
Yes**
Yes***
No
Raid anti-spam
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
No
Raid Cleanup
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes

*Unconfigurable, triggers raid prevention based on user joins & damage prevention based on humanly impossible user activity. Will not automatically trigger on the free version of the bot.

Raid detection means a bot can detect the large number of users joining that’s typical of a raid, usually in an X in Y format. This feature is usually chained with Raid Prevention or Damage Prevention to prevent the detected raid from being effective, wherein raiding users will typically spam channels with unsavoury messages.

Raid-user detection is a system designed to detect users who are likely to be participating in a raid independently of the quantity of frequency of new user joins. These systems typically look for users that were created recently or have no profile picture, among other triggers depending on how elaborate the system is.

Raid prevention stops a raid from happening, either by Raid detection or Raid-user detection. These countermeasures stop participants of a raid specifically from harming your server by preventing raiding users from accessing your server in the first place, such as through kicks, bans, or mutes of the users that triggered the detection.

Damage prevention stops raiding users from causing any disruption via spam to your server by closing off certain aspects of it either from all new users, or from everyone. These functions usually prevent messages from being sent or read in public channels that new users will have access to. This differs from Raid Prevention as it doesn’t specifically target or remove new users on the server.

Raid anti-spam is an anti spam system robust enough to prevent raiding users’ messages from disrupting channels via the typical spam found in a raid. For an anti-spam system to fit this dynamic, it should be able to prevent Fast Messages and Repeated Text. This is a subset of Damage Prevention.

Raid cleanup commands are typically mass-message removal commands to clean up channels affected by spam as part of a raid, often aliased to ‘Purge’ or ‘Prune’.It should be noted that Discord features built-in raid and user bot detection, which is rather effective at preventing raids as or before they happen. If you are logging member joins and leaves, you can infer that Discord has taken action against shady accounts if the time difference between the join and the leave times is extremely small (such as between 0-5 seconds). However, you shouldn’t rely solely on these systems if you run a large or public server.

User Filters
Messages aren’t the only way potential evildoers can present unsavoury content to your server. They can also manipulate their Discord username or Nickname to cause trouble. There are a few different ways a username can be abusive and different bots offer different filters to prevent this.

Filter
Mee6
Dyno
Giselle
Gaius
YAGPDB
Carl
Gearbot
Bad words
No
No
No
Yes*
Yes
No
No
Spam
No
No
No
Yes*
Yes**
No
No
Hoisting
No
No
No
Yes*
Yes**
No
No

*Gaius can apply same blacklist/whitelist to names as messages or only filter based on items in the blacklist tagged %name

**YAGPDB can use configured word-list filters OR a regex filter

Username filtering is less important than other forms of auto moderation, when choosing which bot(s) to use for your auto moderation needs, this should typically be considered last, since users with unsavory usernames can just be nicknamed in order to hide their actual username.

Hypothesis
Chart/Table Affected
Expected Result
Enabling or adjusting the Welcome Screen will guide users to the right introduction channels and encourage engagement
Welcome Screen
  • All metrics
Growth & Activation
  • How many new members successfully activate on their first day? - % visited more than 3 channels
  • Users click on each channel in equal proportion and send messages in equal proportion afterwards
  • % visited more than 3 channels will increaseFirst day activation increases
Streamlining the channel and role structure will make the server less overwhelming to new users and encourage participatio

nand/or

Greeting people upon joining the server in a general chat channel will encourage them to respond and participate in the community
Growth & Activation
  • How many new members successfully activate on their first day?
Engagement
  • How many members visited and communicated?
  • Message activity
  • Which text/voice channels do people use the most?
  • % talked (voice or text) will increase
  • % communicators will increase
  • Message activity will increase
  • Channels that are made opt in, require privileged access, or moved to the bottom of the channel list will have less engagement than other channels
  • The channel with greet messages will have an increased number of readers and, if send messages is enabled, a greater number of messages and chatters
Implementing a news feed announcement channels with role notifications will encourage people to check the announcement channel regularly
Growth & Activation
  • How many new members retain the next week?
Engagement
  • Which text/voice channels do people use the most?
  • Members retained will increase
  • Readers on the announcement channel will increase
Implementing community engagement campaigns will improve activity
The measurement and expected results of each community engagement campaign will vary based on the exact nature of the campaign. However, you can expect that they will improve some combination of first day activation, user retention, and/or percent communicators within your server.

One additional component not included in the table is the effects of implementing a verification gate. The ramifications of a verification gate are difficult to quantify and not easily summarized. Verification gates make it harder for people to join in the conversation of your server, but in exchange help protect your community from trolls, spam bots, those unable to read your server’s language, or other low intent users. This can make administration and moderation of your server much easier. You’ll also see that the percent of people that visit more than 3 channels increases as they explore the server and follow verification instructions, and that percent talked may increase if people need to type a verification command.

However, in exchange you can expect to see server leaves increase. In addition, total engagement on your other channels may grow at a slower pace. User retention will decrease as well. Furthermore, this will complicate the interpretation of your welcome screen metrics, as the welcome screen will need to be used to help people primarily follow the verification process as opposed to visiting many channels in your server. There is also no guarantee that people who send a message after clicking to read the verification instructions successfully verified. In order to measure the efficacy of your verification system, you may need to use a custom solution to measure the proportion of people that pass or fail verification.

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