UKNOWME FAQ

This page covers the questions people usually have when they first try UKNOWME. If you want setup advice, head to the guides library. If you need account help, use Contact & Support.

What is UKNOWME?

UKNOWME is a platform for receiving anonymous feedback through a shareable inbox link. You create an account, share your drop page, and review incoming messages privately from your dashboard.

Who is UKNOWME for?

The product is designed for creators, students, small teams, community organizers, and anyone who wants honest input without forcing people into public replies. It works best when the inbox owner asks clear questions and sets expectations before sharing the link.

Are messages truly anonymous?

Messages are displayed anonymously to the inbox owner by default. To keep the platform safe, UKNOWME may still retain technical information needed for abuse prevention, moderation, fraud detection, and legal compliance. That balance keeps the product usable without leaving it unmoderated.

What content is not allowed?

UKNOWME does not allow harassment, hate speech, threats, scams, spam, personal data exposure, or other abusive or unlawful content. If a message crosses the line, report it. Enforcement can include content removal, account suspension, and escalation when necessary.

Can I send or receive media?

The product supports text messages and selected media attachments through the drop flow. If you are collecting feedback publicly, treat media uploads with the same moderation standards as text and review them promptly from your dashboard.

Are public drop pages indexed by search engines?

No. Drop pages are served with noindex directives because they are functional submission pages, not public reading pages. The public, indexable content on the site is the landing page, guides, FAQ, and policy or support pages.

How do privacy requests work?

Use the privacy request form for access, deletion, correction, or do-not-sell/share requests. That workflow helps us verify identity and route the request according to the correct privacy process.

Need practical next steps? The guides library explains how to ask better questions, moderate safely, and turn anonymous input into useful action.