# Disputes & safety

Weird doesn't mean lawless. A few systems keep everyone safe and honest.

## Revisions

If a delivery is close but not right, you don't have to accept or dispute — you can **request one revision**. The fulfiller gets a chance to fix it and resubmit. There's one revision window per job, so be specific about what needs to change.

## Disputes

If a delivery never arrives, or it's genuinely not what was agreed, open a **dispute** instead of accepting. While a dispute is open, escrow is frozen — nothing pays out. A real human reviews both sides and the evidence, then decides:

- **Release** to the fulfiller (the work was fine),
- **Refund** to the poster (it wasn't), or
- a **partial** split where that's fairest.

Filing disputes in bad faith — to dodge paying for good work — can earn a strike.

## Human moderation

Every request and every delivery gets a **human moderation pass** before it goes public. We screen for anything illegal, harmful, or against the rules. Uploaded media is also scanned automatically for known illegal content.

## Strikes

We use a strike system for behavior that breaks trust:

- Trying to move a deal off-platform to dodge fees (you get one warning first, then strikes).
- Backing out after being picked, or ghosting a job.
- Delivering content that gets rejected, or filing frivolous disputes.

Strikes decay over time. Enough active strikes and the account is banned. Banned accounts can't post, fulfill, or receive payouts.

## Staying safe

- **Keep it on-platform.** Chat, files, and payment all live here for a reason — escrow and moderation only protect you inside the system.
- **Don't share contact info** in chat to take things outside. The filter catches it, and it's a strike after the first warning.
- **Report anything off.** Every page has a report button; a human reads every report.

## Privacy

Finished work is **private by default**. It only appears on the public [discover feed](/discover) if *both* the poster and the fulfiller explicitly opt in — and either side can revoke that later, which immediately pulls it from the feed.
