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How ban system work for being toxic?

I was never banned in siege before but today i wrote a message with a word re♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ What happend is that i was solo player matched with 4 premades they poked me (throwing lesion posion on me, rook tag me with his gun etc..). I didnt record a game but i was so mad and wrote that in chat.

Message recived in chat:
The following message was not sent and will be reviewed for inappropriate conduct:*re♥♥♥♥♥♥♥

https://rainbow6.ubisoft.com/siege/en-us/news/152-326395-16/rainbow-six-siege-code-of-conduct

First offense: 30 minutes temporary ban
Second offense: 2 hours temporary ban
Third Offense: 2 hours temporary ban
After three offenses: an investigation will be conducted and may lead to a permanent ban (maximum penalty)

So will i get banned 30 minutes or permanent ban for this. I saw some posts here on forum with permanent ban without warning.

Last edited by End Times; 15 Dec, 2018 @ 11:37am

Date Posted: 15 Dec, 2018 @ 11:35am

Posts: 22


Posted by3 years ago

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today i was playing r6 and someone said "any one russian" so i said "yes cyka" . i will get banned for that ??

i said it as joke im a csgo player and i think its normal to say it ..

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level 1

Not gonna be banned for that, but Ubi says that being salty on a pegi 18 game is too much.

About Community

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Welcome to the Rainbow Six subreddit, a community for R6 fans to discuss Rainbow Six Siege and past favorites.


On December 10th, we will be evolving our chat toxicity system by activating a chat filter. As a part of our efforts to address toxicity, we previously implemented an automatic ban feature for inappropriate language. Upon review, we found that the automatic ban feature, while effective at curtailing bad behavior, was intrusive to the gameplay of other players not engaging in the inappropriate activity. Therefore, the current system for auto-bans is evolving to improve the experience for all players, including those behaving appropriately.

The goal of the chat filter is to encourage players to be vigilant with the language they are using without immediately disrupting other players. While we valued the performance against toxicity that the auto-ban system brought, we also wanted to provide a more transparent feedback system to our players. The chat filter system will not only give direct feedback to players who are using toxic language, but will continue to allow us to provide appropriate sanctions to offending players.

When players use inappropriate language, they will receive the following private message:

The following message was not sent and will be reviewed for inappropriate conduct:word used

The flagged message is not broadcasted to other players in the match.

For clarity, manual toxicity reviews for temporary and permanent bans will continue in the same way that they have for the last few years.

December 10, 2018 Rainbow Six Siege’s chat filters are getting a significant update.

Earlier this year, Ubisoft implemented auto-bans for toxic chat in Rainbow Six Siege, but now the developers are taking a slightly softer approach. Now, messages that trigger the language filter simply won’t be appear in chat, but they will be sent along to the moderation team for manual review. It’s not clear whether auto-bans have been entirely removed, however.

Players who use “inappropriate language” will now see a private indicator saying that “the following message was not sent and will be reviewed for inappropriate conduct,” along with a note on the specific word used. This has an added benefit in preventing other players from seeing even the censored version of a toxic message.

“The goal of the chat filter is to encourage players to be vigilant with the language they are using without immediately disrupting other players,” Ubisoft says in developer blog. “While we valued the performance against toxicity that the auto-ban system brought, we also wanted to provide a more transparent feedback system to our players. The chat filter system will not only give direct feedback to players who are using toxic language, but will continue to allow us to provide appropriate sanctions to offending players.”

This pretty directly addresses the largest part of the community’s concern over the toxic chat filter, as it puts the onus of issuing bans on human moderators rather than making those suspensions automatic. The new system looks to be better all around.

In March, Rainbow Six Siege community manager Craig Robinson said Siege was planning a crackdown on toxic behavior within the player community. That’s included big ban waves for hackers and tougher penalties for team killing alongside the chat filters. The fight against people behaving like jerks on the internet continues, likely into eternity.