Sportlog policies
Community guidelines
A practical code for keeping Sportlog encouraging, honest, and safe.
Last updated:
Train together, safely
Sportlog is built for people to move, improve, and meet others without intimidation. These guidelines apply to profiles, reels, proof clips, crews, events, chats, and offline interactions arranged through the Service.
1. Encourage—do not harass
- Respect people’s boundaries, identities, experience levels, bodies, and training goals.
- Do not bully, threaten, shame, stalk, sexually harass, or repeatedly contact someone who has said no.
- Do not promote hatred or discrimination based on protected or personal characteristics.
2. Keep workouts and rewards honest
- Submit proof that reflects your own real activity.
- Do not reuse, edit deceptively, automate, or coordinate false proof to gain XP, rankings, or rewards.
- Do not impersonate athletes, coaches, venues, staff, or other users.
3. Share only safe, permitted content
- Get consent before recording or posting identifiable people, especially in gyms and private venues.
- Do not share private information such as home addresses, access codes, financial details, or live location without permission.
- Do not post sexual exploitation, graphic violence, instructions for dangerous wrongdoing, scams, malware, or illegal goods.
- Respect copyright, trademarks, music rights, and venue recording rules.
4. Meet smart
- For a first meetup, choose a public, staffed location and tell someone where you are going.
- Do not pressure anyone to share contact details, exact addresses, transport, money, or equipment.
- Leave and contact local emergency services if a situation feels unsafe. Sportlog is not an emergency service.
5. Protect younger users
Sexual content involving minors, grooming, exploitation, or attempts to move a minor into unsafe private contact are prohibited and may be reported to the appropriate authorities. Users must be at least 13.
6. Report, block, and appeal
Use in-app report and block controls when available. Include enough context for us to review without reposting harmful material. For urgent physical danger, contact local emergency services first.
7. Enforcement principles
We consider severity, context, intent, harm, and prior violations. Severe conduct may result in immediate action. Automated systems may help prioritize material, but users can report errors for human review. We may preserve limited evidence when needed for safety, fraud prevention, or legal compliance.