Community Standards
Last updated: July 8, 2026
These standards explain what you can and can't publish on git-royal, how we enforce them, and how to report content. They work alongside our Terms of Service.
1. You're responsible for what you publish
git-royal hosts pages you create on a git-royal subdomain, but the content on them — cover art, images, audio, and links — is yours, and you're responsible for making sure it's lawful and that you have the rights to it. We don't pre-screen content; we review and act on it after the fact and when it's reported.
2. Not allowed
- Child sexual abuse material (CSAM) or any content that sexually exploits or endangers a minor. This is a zero-tolerance category — see below.
- Other unlawful content, or content that promotes serious harm.
- Content you don't have the rights to, or that infringes copyright, trademark, or someone's likeness.
- Spam, scams, malware, phishing, or deceptive impersonation.
- Content that violates the rules of a connected platform (Meta, TikTok, Spotify, Stripe).
3. Child safety (CSAM)
We have zero tolerance for content that sexually exploits or endangers minors. When we become aware of apparent CSAM, we remove public access, preserve the material as required by law, and report it to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC)and cooperate with law enforcement.
If you encounter suspected child sexual abuse material anywhere — on git-royal or elsewhere — you can report it directly to the NCMEC CyberTipline at report.cybertip.org.
4. How we enforce
We may, at any time and without notice, review, unpublish, remove, quarantine, or disable any content or account that violates these standards or our Terms, or that creates legal risk. For serious or repeated violations we may suspend or terminate the account.
5. Copyright
If you believe content on git-royal infringes your copyright, report it below with the specific page and a description of the work, and we'll act on valid notices.
6. Report content
Use the form below to report a page that breaks these standards. For urgent child-safety reports, please also use the NCMEC CyberTipline.