Blacklisting
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Blacklisting
Blacklisting is Furbol’s “don’t waste my attention on this” tool. When you blacklist someone or something, Furbol keeps it in your lists but marks it so you can scan past it quickly instead of having it blend in with everything else.
What you can blacklist
- Other users. Any other Furbol player — a person, a host, doesn’t matter.
- Venues. A sport centre you’d rather not play at.
- Games. A specific game you’re not interested in.
What it does
Blacklisting is a flag, not a filter. The item stays in your lists — it just gets highlighted so it’s easy for you to skip.
- Your lists. Blacklisted users, venues, and games still appear in search results, player suggestions, and nearby lists. They’re tagged “blacklisted by you” so the app can render them differently — dimmed, marked, or pushed lower — depending on the screen.
- Your hosted games (for user blacklists). If you host a game and you’ve blacklisted a user, that user is excluded from your game’s roster the same way a host-excluded invitation would be. They can’t appear on your players list.
- The other side is not notified. Blacklisting is quiet — the person or venue isn’t told. It changes your view and your hosted games; it doesn’t send a message.
The game blacklist works like a pre-emptive decline
Blacklisting a game specifically behaves like a decline of an invitation:
- If you’ve already been invited to that game, the blacklist acts as a decline.
- If you haven’t been invited yet, it acts as a pre-emptive decline — the host can’t place you in it, and the game stays visibly tagged in your lists so you know to skim past it.
The mirror effect
Blacklisting belongs to the blacklister. If you blacklist someone, your view of them changes; their view of you doesn’t — unless they also blacklist you back.