COMMUNITY STANDARDS
Last updated June 2026
How Hordr works
Hordr is a tool for saving the things you find on the internet that you don't want to lose. Some people use it like a private filing cabinet. Some people share collections with a partner or a small group. Some people post a curated mix publicly, like a Linktree.
All of those are fine with us.
We try to stay out of your business. This page is the short list of where we draw the line, and why.
What we don't tolerate, ever
Three things will get content removed immediately, the responsible account banned, and — where the law requires — reported to authorities:
- Sexual content involving minors. We use automated detection on uploaded images and we report matches to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC), per US law.
- Threats of violence, or content that organizes violence against a specific person or group.
- Doxxing — publishing someone's private contact info, address, or identity without their consent in a way meant to enable harm.
These are bright lines. There is no “but it was a joke” exception.
What we don't allow
The next tier — content that gets removed when we see it or when it's reported, and may lead to a ban if it's a pattern:
- Harassment of specific people, including targeted pile-ons and slurs
- Marketplaces for clearly illegal goods (drugs, stolen credentials, weapons in jurisdictions where regulated)
- Impersonation of real people in a way intended to deceive
- Mass spam — automated posting, link-stuffing, scam funnels
Adult content
You can save adult content (legal porn, NSFW art, anything else lawful but not-safe-for-work) for your own use. We do not care what's in your private mixes.
We do care about it not being public-facing.
By design, anything you upload to Hordr as a screenshot can never appear on a publicly-viewable mix page. That's enforced in code, not just in policy. Items captured from regular URL scraping (a product page, a recipe, an article) can appear publicly if you turn on public sharing for a mix; items you upload as images cannot, regardless of any toggle.
If you have a public mix and put adult content in it via URL sharing, that's on you to keep within whatever local laws apply. We'll respect reports if someone flags it.
What we don't police
Anything legal that doesn't fit the above. We don't curate based on taste. We don't have a politics. If your saved-link aesthetic isn't to our personal taste, that's not a Hordr problem.
How this works
Most enforcement is reactive: someone reports content, we look, we act.
To report: long-press any item or mix in the app and choose Report. Pick the reason, add notes if helpful, submit. For general questions or non-urgent reports, email support@hordr.app. For anything urgent — CSAM, imminent threats — email craig@daydia.com directly.
Our target response time is 24 hours for the bright-line categories above, 7 days for everything else.
Bans and removals are at our discretion. If you think we got it wrong, reply to the notification we send and we'll re-review.
Who we are
Hordr is built by Daydia Inc., based in San Francisco, California. The buck stops with Craig Swanson, founder.