Apparently if I don't post on this blog it will be suspended
and then deleted, so here it is.
10. Blog suspension and deletion for
inactivity
Blog.com
reserves the right to suspend and delete blogs based on activity criteria.
Suspension and deletion criteria are applied individually per blog hosted on
Blog.com. A blog will be considered active if it fullfils at least one of the
following conditions:
(i) It subscribes any premium service.
(ii) It contains more than ten posts, and the most recent post is less than eighteen months old.
(iii) It contains more than one post, and the most recent post is less than six months old.
(iv) Its most recent post is less than two weeks old.
Blogs that can’t be considered active will be marked as inactive. Blog.com may at any time start a deletion process for inactive blogs. The deletion process occurs as follows:
(i) The blog is suspended for inactivity
(ii) An email is sent to the registered owner email address, informing of the suspension
(iii) The blog is deleted thirty days after the suspension date, if it still can’t be considered active.
(i) It subscribes any premium service.
(ii) It contains more than ten posts, and the most recent post is less than eighteen months old.
(iii) It contains more than one post, and the most recent post is less than six months old.
(iv) Its most recent post is less than two weeks old.
Blogs that can’t be considered active will be marked as inactive. Blog.com may at any time start a deletion process for inactive blogs. The deletion process occurs as follows:
(i) The blog is suspended for inactivity
(ii) An email is sent to the registered owner email address, informing of the suspension
(iii) The blog is deleted thirty days after the suspension date, if it still can’t be considered active.
Nice.....
Angus
1 comment:
And I will post a comment. This will give the monitors the impression of activity. I am an American who wants to know what a single-payer health care system looks like because I believe the U.S. will ultimately adopt such a system. I have been a Soldier all of my adult life and field medics have taken care of most of my aches and pains. I want to see past the hyperbole and learn what the operational reality of Government-run health care look like.
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