Document 03 · Community Guidelines

Community Guidelines

Seven rules for keeping this the rare corner of the internet where you can mention your morning protocol on a first message and get a follow-up question instead of a blank stare.

Last updated: June 12, 2026

1Be real

Your photos are of you. Your age is your age. Your bio describes a person who actually exists and is actually you. Catfishing wastes everyone’s time — and around here, people take their time seriously enough to track it in five-minute increments.

2Be kind

Everyone here is at a different point on the curve. Someone’s “curious” is as welcome as someone’s “veteran.” Don’t gatekeep, don’t lecture, don’t audit anyone’s lifestyle. Disagree about protocols the way you would on a good first date: with curiosity.

3Zero sourcing. Zero vendor talk.

Never ask where someone gets anything. Never tell anyone where to get anything. No vendor names, no links, no price talk, no referral codes, no “DM me” workarounds — in profiles, photos, or chat. First violation is a permanent ban.

Why so absolute? Because facilitating the sale of compounds is the one thing that could get this platform — and its members — into real legal trouble, and because a marketplace dynamic attracts scammers who prey on exactly this community. The total ban is what keeps PeptideBonding legal, safe, and free of vendor bots. It protects your matches and it protects you. We flag this automatically and humans review every flag.

4No medical claims, no dosing advice

Your tags and your bio describe your lifestyle, not a treatment plan. Don’t make claims about what any compound cures, fixes, or guarantees, and don’t give dosing or protocol instructions to other members. “I love my recovery routine” is perfect. “Here’s what you should take” is a violation. Nobody here is anybody’s clinician.

5Keep it clothed

No nudity or sexually explicit content in photos, bios, or messages. Gym photos, sauna-adjacent photos, race-finish photos: great. Anything you couldn’t show a moderately tolerant HR department: no. Photos are reviewed before they go live.

6No harassment, full stop

No threats, hate, stalking, or pile-ons. If someone unmatches or stops replying, that conversation is over — don’t look for them elsewhere. Repeated unwanted contact is harassment even when each individual message seems polite.

7See something, report it

Report and block tools are on every profile and in every conversation. Use them freely — for sourcing talk especially, even if it seems harmless. Reports are reviewed by humans, reporters stay anonymous, and reporting in good faith will never get you in trouble, even if we decide no rule was broken.

  • Something feels transactional? Report it — see the Safety page.
  • Not sure if it breaks a rule? Report it anyway and let us sort it out.
  • Urgent or off-platform issue? Email [email protected].