+.PP
+The \fBuser-*\fR messages are only sent to admin users, and are not sent over
+non-local connections unless \fBremote_userman\fR is enabled.
+.SH "USER PROPERTIES"
+The following user properties are defined:
+.TP
+.B created
+The timestamp when the user was created.
+See \fBTIMESTAMPS\fR below.
+This user property cannot be modified.
+.TP
+.B email
+The user's email address.
+.TP
+.B password
+The user's password.
+.TP
+.B rights
+The rights the user has, separated by commas.
+.SH RIGHTS
+The full set of rights are:
+.TP
+.B read
+User can perform read-only operations
+.TP
+.B play
+User can add tracks to the queue
+.TP
+.B "move any"
+User can move any track
+.TP
+.B "move mine"
+User can move their own tracks
+.TP
+.B "move random"
+User can move randomly chosen tracks
+.TP
+.B "remove any"
+User can remove any track
+.TP
+.B "remove mine"
+User can remove their own tracks
+.TP
+.B "remove random"
+User can remove randomly chosen tracks
+.TP
+.B "scratch any"
+User can scratch any track
+.TP
+.B "scratch mine"
+User can scratch their own tracks
+.TP
+.B "scratch random"
+User can scratch randomly chosen tracks
+.TP
+.B volume
+User can change the volume
+.TP
+.B admin
+User can perform admin operations
+.TP
+.B rescan
+User can initiate a rescan
+.TP
+.B register
+User can register new users.
+Normally only the
+.B guest
+user would have this right.
+.TP
+.B userinfo
+User can edit their own userinfo
+.TP
+.B prefs
+User can modify track preferences
+.TP
+.B "global prefs"
+User can modify global preferences
+.TP
+.B pause
+User can pause/resume
+.SH TIMESTAMPS
+A \fItimestamp\fR is a decimal integer giving a number of seconds past the
+epoch, disregarding counting leap seconds.
+The epoch is midnight, January 1 1970, UTC.
+.SH NOTES
+For file listings, the regexp applies to the basename of the returned file, not
+the whole filename, and letter case is ignored.
+\fBpcrepattern\fR(3) describes the regexp syntax.
+.PP
+Filenames are in UTF-8 even if the collection they come from uses some other
+encoding - if you want to access the real file (in such cases as the filenames
+actually correspond to a real file) you'll have to convert to whatever the
+right encoding is.