Community Guidelines
Community standards for highlights and feedback.
The highlight, FAQ, and Q&A areas are for constructive pickleball learning. Share only content you own or have permission to use, avoid personal data, and keep feedback respectful. Harassment, hate, unauthorized uploads, spam, misinformation, and vote manipulation are not allowed. Public user posts should be reviewed before they are published or monetized.
Why this page matters
This policy page is not just a formality. It explains how Picklary creates content, separates ads from editorial work, limits user submissions, and corrects errors. Clear privacy, copyright, advertising, and moderation standards make the site safer for readers and advertisers.
Picklary covers topics that can change, including rules, paddles, players, events, and DUPR-related links. For that reason, these policy pages also explain the limits of current information, the need to verify external sources, the separation of advertising and editorial work, and the review standards for user input. They act as a public trust layer and an internal checklist for future features.
Community boards, highlight videos, and gear reviews can raise copyright, privacy, and moderation issues. This version does not automatically publish user posts to a public server, and a public launch should include reporting, removal requests, spam prevention, and pre-publication review.
These pages are kept in the footer so readers can find them at any time. They also serve as a checklist when new tools, articles, ads, or community features are added: the new feature should not conflict with the stated privacy, advertising, correction, or moderation standards.
Readers should use these policies together, because privacy, cookies, advertising, corrections, and community moderation affect one another when interactive tools are added. This is especially important for a site that combines articles, tools, external links, and future community features.
Before public community launch
Current board and highlight inputs are not automatically published to a public server. A public launch should include reporting, deletion requests, review, spam controls, repeat-violator limits, copyright checks, and personal-data safeguards.