Trust has to be part of the product, not a later cleanup project.

Dating products need clear ways to disengage, report, block, and escalate problems. Likert keeps those expectations visible as access expands.

People dancing in a dark social setting

Safety principles

Blocking, reporting, and disengaging should be obvious when something feels wrong.

Moderation should protect trust and user safety, even when that means limiting harmful access.

Safety systems should be visible enough to use quickly without turning the whole product into a warning label.

Two people talking in a bright nightlife setting

What users can do

Report or block profiles when behavior feels unsafe, deceptive, coercive, abusive, or simply unwanted.

Use support@likert.dating for urgent product-safety issues that need human follow-up outside the normal in-app flow.

Treat off-platform communication carefully and use ordinary personal safety judgment before sharing contact details or meeting in person.

Friends talking while walking on campus

The trust model should stay visible as the product scales.

Learning stays personal

Compatibility answers improve discovery without becoming public votes, attractiveness scores, or profile clutter.

Controls people can find

Reporting, blocking, visibility, privacy choices, and account deletion are treated as core product surfaces.

Rules before scale

Safety, privacy, and community expectations stay visible as availability grows, so trust does not have to be retrofitted later.

Two people looking at phones together at home

When something needs human follow-up

Urgent trust-and-safety questions can be sent to support@likert.dating.