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Trust Policy

Moderation Policy

Moderation policy is not just a legal or support document. It is one of the clearest trust signals a marketplace or directory can publish because it explains what standards exist and how decisions are made.

What Moderation Should Cover

Listings should be reviewed for clarity, deceptive claims, obvious abuse patterns, missing disclosures, and whether the page still represents current functionality honestly.

Status transitions such as public, pending, down, denied, patched, or hidden should be visible enough that users understand what changed and why a page may no longer be promoted.

How Enforcement Should Be Explained

A good moderation policy explains the difference between removal, downranking, temporary restriction, and permanent enforcement. That avoids confusion when a page disappears from a top list but still exists.

It should also explain how user reports, author appeals, and repeat violations are handled so that the review process feels consistent instead of arbitrary.

Why This Helps SEO

Search engines and users both respond better to sites that demonstrate process. Moderation documentation creates linkable trust content and supports the credibility of script, executor, and profile pages.

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