Community guidelines


Comuniq wasn’t built to be just another place full of empty content. Every community here should have a clear purpose: to inform, teach, or spark meaningful discussions. If it’s not adding real value to the reader, it probably doesn’t belong here.
When someone joins a community, they expect to walk away with something useful. It could be a new idea, a well-explained concept, or even a thoughtful question that leads to a good conversation. Posts made just for the sake of posting, without context or depth, slowly weaken the whole space.

Moderators play an important role in this. It’s not just about removing content, but about maintaining the quality of conversations. A good community is one where people feel it’s worth participating, and that only happens when there’s some level of care. Encouraging valuable contributions and filtering out low-effort content makes all the difference.

As for promotion, yes, you can share your projects, products, or services. That’s part of the ecosystem. But when it starts happening too often, it creates noise and throws things off balance. If a community starts to feel like an ad board, it stops being useful. At that point, it may be penalized.

A quick note on AI-generated content. There’s nothing wrong with using it, but posting raw, untouched AI text is usually easy to spot and not very engaging. If you use it, take the time to refine it, adjust the tone, and add your own perspective. What makes a post truly valuable is the human layer behind it. In the end, everything comes down to respect and collaboration. Disagreements are normal and even healthy. The goal is to build something together, not to tear discussions down. If everyone does their part, Comuniq stops being just another platform and becomes a place where it’s actually worth spending time.

A social news and discussion community