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Use the map to check nearby pins first, then report only when the spot still needs to be added.

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Moderation

Public cleanup content needs clear standards.

LitterMeNot is built around practical public reports, safer photos, controlled community follow-up, and moderation that keeps the site useful instead of noisy.

Report litterReport a concern

Why this page exists

Public reporting and community features only work if spam, private information, unsafe instructions, and unrelated content are kept out of the public flow.

  • Public reports may be reviewed before appearing
  • Unsafe or private details may be hidden
  • Spam, harassment, and fake reports are not allowed
Standard

Useful public reports

Reports should describe a real litter issue, use a clear location, and include only the details needed for cleanup follow-through.

Standard

Privacy-first photos

Photos should focus on the litter, not people, license plates, house numbers, private yards, or details that do not help identify the cleanup issue.

Standard

No spam or promotion

Public content should not be used for unrelated advertising, link drops, repeated copy-paste posts, fake reports, or attempts to manipulate ads or traffic.

Standard

Safety boundaries

The site is not an emergency service and should not encourage anyone to handle needles, chemicals, unstable piles, traffic hazards, or private-property situations.

Content that may be hidden or removed

  • Fake, exaggerated, duplicate, or intentionally misleading reports.
  • Photos that unnecessarily show faces, license plates, house numbers, private-property details, or unrelated people.
  • Posts that identify or accuse private people when the cleanup issue can be described without naming them.
  • Commercial spam, link drops, unrelated promotion, scraped text, copied filler, or automated posts.
  • Harassment, threats, hateful content, personal attacks, or attempts to shame specific residents.
  • Instructions that encourage unsafe cleanup, trespassing, traffic exposure, or handling hazardous materials.

How reports become public

A submitted report is not treated as a guaranteed public record. Reports can be reviewed, corrected, hidden, or rejected when they do not help public cleanup follow-through or when they create safety, privacy, spam, or legal concerns.

  • Location and cleanup context matter more than long commentary.
  • Photos help when they document the litter clearly and safely.
  • Public map visibility is for useful cleanup signals, not private disputes.
  • Emergency, criminal, road, or environmental hazards should still go to the right official channel.

Community updates should add follow-through

Community areas are for practical cleanup coordination, route notes, repeat-spot checks, disposal notes, and status updates tied to real places. They are not a general-purpose message board or a place for unrelated debates.

  • Post timing changes, route notes, and cleanup planning details.
  • Keep repeat-spot updates factual and tied to the map.
  • Use respectful language even when a location is frustrating.
  • Do not post private accusations, personal information, or unrelated arguments.

Ad and funding boundaries

If advertising is enabled, ads must remain separate from public reporting and community content. The site should never ask users to click ads, refresh ads, view ads as a favor, or submit content for ad-related manipulation.

  • Reports and posts should exist because they help cleanup visibility.
  • Rewards should never depend on ad clicks or ad views.
  • Sponsored or ad-related elements should not hide, imitate, or interfere with public content.
  • Funding language should stay transparent and separate from reporting quality.

See a problem that should be reviewed?

Use the contact page for privacy concerns, incorrect listings, public-content concerns, accessibility issues, or anything that appears unsafe, spammy, or unrelated to cleanup follow-through.

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