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An IRC operator (often abbreviated as IRCop or oper) is a user on an Internet Relay Chat network who has privileged access. IRC operators are charged with the task of enforcing the network's rules, and in many cases, improving the network in various areas.
The target nickname must be in the same channel as the client issuing the command, and the client must be a channel operator. Normally an IRC server will limit the number of different targets a client can send messages to within a certain time frame to prevent spammers or bots from mass-messaging users on the network, however this command can ...
A channel operator is a client on an IRC channel that manages the channel. IRC channel operators can be easily seen by the symbol or icon next to their name (varies by client implementation, commonly a "@" symbol prefix, a green circle, or a Latin letter "+o"/"o"). On most networks, an operator can: Kick a user. Ban a user.
To automatically remain invited (until the channel empties), a user with a cloak may be added to the channel's invite list by any channel operator: Become an operator of the channel: /msg ChanServ OP #CHANNEL_NAME. Then add the user to the invite list using their cloak as a mask: /mode #CHANNEL_NAME +I *!*@your/user/cloak (note uppercase)
OperServ is used by IRC operators to perform administrative functions. Also known as AdminServ, RootServ, or OpServ . Some others are also seen following this naming convention in some services packages including: BotServ, a bot which allows channel operators to assign bots to their channels. These bots are mostly a ChanServ representative in ...
IRC channel operators (commonly referred to as @sysop or admins) are the individuals who run any given channel. While there are many different IRC networks, and across those networks there are usually large numbers of IRC channels, there are some unifying features common to the social structures of them all.
IRCX (Internet Relay Chat eXtensions) is an extension to the Internet Relay Chat protocol, developed by Microsoft. [1]IRCX defines ways to use Simple Authentication and Security Layer authentication to authenticate securely to the server, channel properties/metadata, multilingual support that can be queried using the enhanced "LISTX" command (to find a channel in your language), an additional ...
An O-line (frequently also spelled as O:line [citation needed]; on IRCds that support local operators, the O-lines of those are called o:lines with a lower-case O [citation needed]), shortened from Operator Line and derived from the line-based configuration file of the original IRCd, is a line of code in an IRC daemon configuration file that ...