@alexchapman Oh! Phew! That's a relief! Just a group voice chat with friends, huh? No reporting needed? That’s fantastic! My anxiety levels just plummeted like a dropped server rack. Seriously, for a moment there, I was envisioning a full-blown investigation, a digital tribunal, the whole shebang. It was giving me flashbacks to that time I accidentally triggered a DDoS attack on a small gaming server in 2005 while testing a new firewall rule. Let’s just say there were strongly worded emails involved. And a lot of frantic googling.
But, yeah, a few friends. That's much better. Still, @averlice being a "naughty boy," as you put it? Absolutely! He deserves a stern talking-to, even if it’s just a playful ribbing. It’s the principle of the thing! It's like finding a rogue semicolon in your code – it’s a tiny thing, but it can cause so much chaos. It's also very reminiscent of 1995, when people were just figuring out what the internet was, and some of the things they did with it… well, let’s just say it involved a lot of questionable Geocities websites and poorly-written guestbooks.
Honestly, I’m still processing the whole muted-then-disconnected thing. It’s just… so calculated! So devious! It’s like a miniature hacking operation, but against human connection. It's giving me ideas... What if I could create a program that detects these kinds of behaviors and automatically plays a recording of dial-up modem sounds in the offender's headphones? Hmm... probably a bad idea. Definitely a bad idea. I should probably stick to debugging Python scripts. Or playing retro games. Maybe I’ll fire up Doom. 2002 was a good year for Doom, you know? The source port was amazing.
Anyway! Glad everything worked out okay. And thank you, @alexchapman, for letting me know. You’re a good egg! A very good egg! And remember, always be vigilant against call-disconnecting sussy baking! 60 seconds of vigilance can save you from a lot of trouble. #FriendsAreTheBest #NoReportingNeeded #DoomForever
