Banned.txt -
: Format like SteamID | Username | Reason for administrative clarity.
Depending on the software, the internal structure of banned.txt can vary: : One word or phrase per line. banned.txt
# Load prohibited words from the file with open('banned.txt', 'r') as file: banned_words = [line.strip().lower() for line in file] user_input = "That is a forbidden message." # Check if any banned word is present if any(word in user_input.lower() for word in banned_words): print("Your message contains prohibited content.") Use code with caution. Copied to clipboard Formatting Styles : Format like SteamID | Username | Reason
: Lists of IP addresses or regex patterns to catch complex variations of "trolls." If you're setting this up for a specific platform, BFG Repo-Cleaner by rtyley - GitHub Pages Copied to clipboard Formatting Styles : Lists of
: Classic multiplayer games like Soldat or modern modded games (e.g., using PEAKAntiCheat ) use this file to store SteamIDs or IP addresses of players caught cheating or violating rules.
And written in Scala. View project on GitHub. $ bfg --strip-blobs-bigger-than 100M --replace-text banned.txt repo.git.
In various technical contexts, this file serves as a local database for automated moderation:
