Rules

This page covers Community + Editorial Integrity on AngryPages. Publisher quality and release standards live in Publish. Monetization, ad suitability, and inventory controls live in Ads. Where these documents overlap, the stricter rule applies.

These rules apply to content on AngryPages, including posts, titles, descriptions, images, links, embeds, comments, metadata, and AI-generated or AI-edited media.

1) Community + Editorial Integrity

A. Illegal activity and harmful facilitation

Do not publish content that:

  • promotes, instructs, coordinates, or facilitates serious illegal activity;
  • supports fraud, phishing, identity theft, hacking, evasion, trafficking, or violent wrongdoing;
  • sells, brokers, or facilitates unlawful or unsafe access to regulated or restricted goods or services;
  • provides tools, templates, or operational guidance primarily intended to help users deceive, steal, exploit, or bypass lawful safeguards.

B. Hate, harassment, and abuse

Do not publish content that:

  • dehumanizes, threatens, or encourages hatred against people based on protected characteristics or vulnerable status;
  • targets individuals with sustained abuse, humiliation, stalking, brigading, or coordinated harassment;
  • publishes non-public personal information in order to shame, intimidate, or endanger someone;
  • mocks or targets victims of abuse, sexual violence, non-consensual intimate imagery, or similar trauma.

We apply heightened protection to minors, private individuals, and abuse survivors.

C. Violence, extremism, and self-harm

Do not publish content that:

  • praises, supports, recruits for, or materially aids terrorist, extremist, or violent criminal organizations;
  • incites violence, glorifies atrocities, or celebrates real-world harm;
  • encourages suicide, self-harm, eating-disorder behaviors, or dangerous acts likely to cause serious injury;
  • uses graphic or violent material primarily to shock, disgust, or provoke.

Public-interest or documentary context does not excuse glorification, recruitment, or operational facilitation.

D. Sexual exploitation and child safety

AngryPages has zero tolerance for:

  • child sexual abuse material;
  • grooming, sextortion, or sexual exploitation of minors;
  • trafficking, coercive sexual content, or non-consensual intimate imagery;
  • content that promotes paid sexual services or sexual exploitation.

Content presented as suitable for a general or family audience must not contain adult sexual or violent themes.

AngryPages does not allow adult-performer funnels, paid sexual-service promotion, or explicit creator monetization funnels on this service. Creators seeking that lane should use platforms designed for adult content (for example, OnlyFans or X.com).

E. Deception, impersonation, scams, and authenticity

Do not publish content that:

  • impersonates a person, business, institution, or authority in a misleading way;
  • uses forged credentials, fake identities, or fabricated authority claims;
  • runs scams, fraudulent offers, phishing flows, or deceptive funnels;
  • uses coordinated inauthentic behavior to manipulate reach, trust, or public perception;
  • presents synthetic media, fabricated documents, or AI-generated evidence as authentic where that deception could harm readers or subjects.

F. Harmful misinformation

Do not publish demonstrably false or deceptively presented claims when they create a serious risk of real-world harm, including:

  • dangerous medical or safety claims;
  • manipulated or fabricated evidence presented as fact;
  • false claims that interfere with civic, electoral, or other public processes;
  • hoaxes or allegations likely to provoke violence, panic, or severe reputational harm.

Clearly separate fact, allegation, analysis, satire, advocacy, and opinion.

G. Privacy, IP, and legal rights

Do not:

  • leak, trade, or expose private or sensitive personal information;
  • publish content you do not own, control, license, or otherwise have the right to use;
  • infringe copyright, trademark, publicity, or other legal rights;
  • leave up clearly unlawful or clearly rights-infringing material after valid notice.

2) Sensitive-Context Publishing

AngryPages may allow sensitive material when there is clear:

  • educational,
  • documentary,
  • scientific,
  • artistic,
  • journalistic, or
  • public-interest value.

For sensitive content to remain publishable:

  • the context must appear in or near the content itself;
  • the purpose must be clearly explanatory, critical, analytical, or reportorial;
  • the presentation must not be celebratory, fetishistic, recruitive, or instructional for wrongdoing.

Context is not a shield for glorification, shock tactics, hate, exploitation, or facilitation.

Even where content is allowed to remain, we may apply:

  • warnings,
  • age-gating,
  • reduced distribution,
  • tier escalation,
  • limited sharing features, or
  • monetization restrictions.

3) Editorial Workflow

Creators should:

  • draft for clarity first, with a clear headline, summary, and factual spine;
  • distinguish reporting from opinion, satire, fiction, and advocacy;
  • attribute material claims and use primary sourcing where practical;
  • remove private identifiers, unsupported allegations, and unverifiable accusations before publishing;
  • disclose meaningful synthetic, composite, or AI-generated elements where a reasonable reader could mistake them for authentic evidence;
  • review rights, privacy, and defamation risk before release;
  • review reader feedback and policy feedback regularly, then improve the work each cycle.

4) Tiers, Distribution, and Monetization Sensitivity

Use tiers intentionally:

  • Tier 1 / 2: general-audience, mainstream-safe, well-contextualized material;
  • Tier 3 / 4: controversial, graphic, adult, regulated, or otherwise higher-risk material.

Use:

  • Publish for release-quality work intended for audience distribution;
  • IP Vault for custody, drafts, research, source material, and assets not ready for broad release.

Some content may be publishable on AngryPages but not eligible for full monetization or broad recommendation. Higher-risk categories can include:

  • explicit sexual content,
  • graphic or shocking imagery,
  • weapons or explosives,
  • drug promotion,
  • tobacco,
  • alcohol sales or misuse,
  • online gambling,
  • fraud-enabling tools,
  • inflammatory hateful framing,
  • and exploitation of recent sensitive events.

If in doubt, add stronger context, move the content to a higher tier, or separate the durable written asset from the highest-risk presentation.

5) Enforcement

We may take one or more of the following actions:

  • require edits or additional context;
  • apply labels, warnings, or age-gates;
  • limit recommendations, discovery, or sharing features;
  • move content into a higher-risk tier;
  • disable or limit monetization;
  • remove content;
  • suspend publishing privileges;
  • suspend or terminate accounts.

Severe violations may trigger immediate action without prior notice. Repeated violations may result in escalating penalties. Where appropriate, we may provide notice and an appeal path; where safety or law requires it, we may act first.