Content deletion

A Content Deletion is an occurrence in which a title or description of an asset unintentionally contains the text [ Content Deleted ]. Inappropriate usernames will show up as [ Content Deleted (Player ID)] under this feature.

Any player-created content, such as places, forum posts, clothing items, and blurbs, is subject to moderation and having its content deleted.

Causes of Deletion
Most cases of content deletion occur when an asset violates ROBLOX's Terms of Service and/or the ROBLOX Rules of Conduct.

Reverting Deleted Accounts
Users are always encouraged to appeal a [Content Deleted] account. If the appeal is successful, users are prompted to change their account's name, where they will be able to access their accounts, as if the ban never happened.

Fake Content Deletions
Players often attempt to imitate content deletions on their own content as a form of comedic expression. Examples of this include replacing deleted with another past-tense verb, such as [Content Exploded] or [Content removed]. Intentionally posting [Content Deleted] in a forum post can lead to moderation action on that account, and them actually becoming [Content Deleted]

Criticism
Many users claim that various assets are deleted without any true violation of the Terms of Service. False reporting can cause appropriate content to be flagged as inappropriate. Other users cite that references to ROBLOX competitors (such as Minecraft) causes assets to be indicated as inappropriate; the official Terms of Service does not address references to other games as unsuitable material.

Trivia

 * [ Content Deleted ] was originally bad place.
 * People attempt to imitate content deletion by saying [Content Deleted]. However, it is actually [ Content Deleted ].
 * An old way that ROBLOX content deleted a user was by replacing their name with yyc(any random number).
 * There was a forum post complaining about [ Content Deleted ], it however became [ Deleted Content ]
 * [Content Deleted] was used from 2006-2009, however [ Content Deleted ] was used from 2009-present.