Long story short, when I was really young I made a DeviantArt account and used it to comment on really weird fetish posts. I don't wish to elaborate on what the comments entail, since you can probably imagine. Years later (but still far from now), I rediscovered my old DA account and was petrified at its contents. I rushed to delete the profile, thinking all of my comments would be wiped out alongside it. They weren't.
Press the "Parent" link to navigate to the parent comment and wait for the page to load completely. If such link doesn't exist, give an alert message saying "Comments deleted!" and exit the function.
Does anyone know how I could do this? I tried to use document.querySelectorAll(), but it was very tedious and had some problems since I don't always know which class is for what. I bet that every user of deviantART who has employer-critical comments which could existentially marginalize them for having written something in the past during hyped teen years would use such a feature.
Countless DeviantArt users make comments on DeviantArt.com. While most comments are harmless and benign some users may regret their comments at a later date. Some comments may be seen by their writer as embarrassing or containing sensitive information. The current "delete comment" feature is misleading as it merely hides the comments from the public rather than permanently removing the comment data from users' accounts. Please make it so all comments can be easily viewed and accessed and permanently deleted by whoever wrote them.
You cannot delete comments on deviantART, you can however 'hide'them if there are for you. It will simply put it as bar saying'Comment Hidden by Owner'. Also, if it is spam, you can click 'Flagas Spam' and it will also be hidden/taken away.
Sometimes I leave a comment, then think better of it -- perhaps I decide to answer instead. If I delete the comment, does the user still get notified that new comments are available or does the notification take this into account? Are the comments hard-deleted or soft-deleted?
Removing accounts after someone dies is a useful part of preserving their digital legacy. This is an important step in our recommended post-loss checklist, so don't overlook these smaller accounts. While it can be very difficult to delete a DeviantArt account without a username and password, you can at least submit a request and see what the help center staff say.
DeviantArt also reserves the right to delete inactive accounts that have been inactive for a long period of time. This may be done in order to keep DeviantArt free of inactive or abandoned users and improve the overall experience of the community.
Of course, the most recurring task is adding comments to our triggers and actions, but it is always good to know you to delete them. Some of you may be thinking that is a trivial task, simple like adding a comment. But, unfortunately, I have to say that nothing is that trivial in Logic Apps, even this fundamental task.
By setting comments in your actions, you can quickly identify what action is intended for and what is doing, without the need to read all the settings inside the action to try to figure it out. And sometimes, that may not be enough, and you still need to go to some documentation (API Documentations, project documentation, and so on) to understand.
But sometimes, we may find some of them unnecessary or repeating something already mentioned above, and we want to delete them. So, the main question we want to address on this tip is: How can we delete an existing comment?
It may take a while for Redact to delete all your messages. It depends on your network speed. For instance, you might redact three messages every second on your Tumblr account, while Discord or Facebook could be much slower.
Overall, Redact took 18 minutes to delete 2,523 messages. It worked at an average speed of 2.73 messages per second. Imagine how long it would take to do all this by hand. Give it a try and see how much time you save!
Behavior considered "prohibited" in the Etiquette Policy includes racism, spamming, flooding, and failure to supply a model release form for photography work when requested; "discouraged" behaviors include personal arguments and other volatile conversations (these should be conducted via private message instead) and accusations against other users (these should be directed to staff, instead). DeviantART's separate Help Desk FAQ area is more explicit about some of these expectations: "You may not use comments, notes or replies to make statements which are racist, bigoted or which contain other forms of hate speech. Comments or notes which are lewd, sexual or otherwise pornographic are also prohibited".[2] Impersonation of another is also a serious offense.[3]
Anime and Manga
- Akira Ishida (who voiced Xellos in Slayers Next, Kaworu Nagisa in Neon Genesis Evangelion, and many other roles) stopped recording character image songs, and publicly singing in general, after one too many fan complaints about his singing voice.
- Tite Kubo ran a really funny Twitter account whereupon he confirmed the image the Bleach fandom has of his real life self. Then someone had the bright idea to blithely congratulate him on chapter 400 before it was even released in Japan. Ultimately, in September 2015, Kubo suddenly left Twitter, his final message proclaiming, "[Notice] Tomorrow night, after about 24 hours I will delete my Twitter account. Until that time, please direct message me." It turns out that someone on Twitter had been passing photos across the Internet proclaiming to be that of Kubo with Weekly Shōnen Jump proclaiming that these were fake and that they would pursue legal actions if this was being done maliciously.
- Takami Akai, one of the founders of Studio Gainax, ended up leaving the company after having addressed so many complaints about the Off-Model animation in episode four of Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann. In his own words, reading these comments was "like putting [his] face next to an anus and breathing deeply."
- Suehiro Maruo once let slip he avoids unpaid appearances in fear of expecting this result.
- While voice actor Vic Mignogna does his best to be friendly and open with the fans, he has stated that he won't be doing Edward Elric "short rants" or saying "Colonel Mustang looks dead sexy... in a miniskirt!" on request anymore because it was getting old.
- Following the disruption of a Hyperdimension Neptunia the Animation screening by a psycho with a knife attacking Rie Tanaka, Chiyomaru Shikura, the president of 5pb., issued this statement:Regarding the Neptunia incident. My staff and I have been talking, and there seems to be a need to rethink how events will be held. This of course includes having security guards and having more of a feeling of distance between the talent and their fans. It's really a shame.
- Hikaru Midorikawa put his blog on indefinite hiatus after people spotted a female fan with an accessory that Midorikawa himself had, making them think that he was cheating on his wife and attacked her. Turns out the accessory was something he introduced on his blog.
- Mika Yamamori, the creator of Daytime Shooting Star, used to respond to fans on Twitter but has since then been reluctant to reply to any comments unless she feels they are important to her readers. The problem mainly came from two incidents: the first problem was when she discovered that the reason why she had so many international fans respond to her was because of unofficial translations when a fan commented on Chapter 69 before Margaret, the magazine that published Daytime Shooting Star, went on sale in Japan. The second problem was the massive Ship-to-Ship Combat as the series was concluding, where international fans kept leaving very heated comments on her Twitter account. The pressure got to the point where she had to put it on private until the final chapter was published. Today, she rarely responds to her fans, especially if the comments are not in Japanese.
- Shaman King is considered one of the better dubs that 4Kids Entertainment produced, since the series wasn't Bowdlerised as much as other works that 4Kids had under their umbrella. However, since Shaman King revolves around death and features heavy violence, it also attracted ire from Moral Guardians at the time. Coupled with having a bad timeslot and the company's negative reputation, the show flopped in the United States, and is ultimately what led 4Kids to continue their usual censorship and localization practices for future dubs.note Their next dub was One Piece, which is infamous among anime fans as one of the most Macekred English dubs in anime history.
- Shotaro Tokunou, the creator of New Game!, has stated that he will no longer respond to fan letters because some fans have resold fancy paper boards that he had specially drawn and sent after receiving letters. Those paper boards were being raffled around at online auctions.
- Due to manga having a reputation for being frequent targets for theft, Barnes & Noble responded by putting sensor tags, the ones usually reserved for electronics, inside the back cover. Anyone who buys these then faces the tough decision of keeping them in with the annoying added thickness, or try and remove them and risk ripping the page. Then you get the loiterers who treat said manga section as a library and throw the books on the floor after they're done damaging the merchandise for actual customers. As such, a different form of security tag are specifically used, which has a minimal risk of damaging the book itself.
- Chainsaw Man had an oft-profane and politically incorrect Brazilian scanlation become popular before the manga was officially released. Seeing the crass version of "THE FUTURE IS BEST!"note "O futuro é pica!", pica being a slang for penis that is also used to denote something awesome, akin to "the shit" not appear in the dub led to fans of this version harrassing Guilherme Briggs, whose character said that line, and ultimately making him quit social media.
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