Moderation

At Dartroom, we want to provide a nice, well-rounded and safe environment to buy and sell art. This is in the interest of artists, collectors and Dartroom. Artists do not have to compete with scammers and un-professional artists for space and attention on the site. Collectors can buy with confidence when all the artists are verified by default and are unlikely to stop with their NFT journey. To achieve this ideal environment, Dartroom strongly moderates the site.

User accounts

If a user customises their account by uploading an inappropriate profile picture, links to inappropriate sites or places inappropriate comments in their description, their accounts can get banned from customisation. This does not mean they can not buy NFTs on Dartroom anymore. It only means that their account customisation is removed and can no longer be edited.

Artists accounts

All artists on Dartroom need to go through a verification process. They need to verify their social media accounts. And incase their social history is not sufficient to prove their work is original, they will need to provide proof that their work is their own.

We are revising our application process because of the recent increase of scammers trying and sometimes succeeding to get on to Dartroom.

NFTs

In addition to the moderation of accounts, Dartroom can also moderate individual NFTs. If an NFT displays inappropriate content, hate speech, misinformation or racism, the NFTs can be removed from Dartroom. This means the NFT can no longer be viewed on Dartroom, but it does not mean the NFT is deleted. Dartroom does not have the power to delete users' NFTs.

The Dartroom admins might also ask an artist to delete NFTs themself if they contain copyrighted content such as protected intellectual property or brand names.

NSFW marking

If an artist has chosen not to mark an NFT as not safe for work, but the Dartroom admins do think it should be marked. Then the Dartroom admins are allowed to mark the NFT as NSFW.

Edit this page on GitHub Updated at Mon, Apr 4, 2022