Nextdoor is an exceptional social media private forum for neighbors in a defined area to get to know one another, exchange ideas, offer goods and services, fight crime and shape their community. It is a newsfeed, sounding board, bulletin board, and service offering forum all rolled into one Nextdoor Leads supervise, or moderate according to site Guidelines, and system algorithms search for potential improper, accusatory or controversial posts. Guideline enforcement isn't often understood by neighbors, but over time users learn to appreciate the rules. The site is evolving, so it is changing to keep up with technology and society. There is a heavy hint of family values in the Guidelines, so if users remember that, they will be fine. Trouble-makers are warned before their account is suspended for flagrant violations. This site is extremely valuable to those who wish to use it properly.
Many years ago, NextDoor informed me that I'd been made an "admin" and started sending me other neighbors' comments to moderate. While a few of the site's guidelines make sense (don't threaten people or advocate breaking the law), most (be kind, don't soapbox, etc.) are virtually uninterpretable.
I've been able to see how my neighbors and fellow admins navigate this. Sadly, it's only led in one direction--the unclear guidelines are abused to simply censor political views that don't align with the majority view. Worse, neighbors who flagrantly violate harassment rules are given a free pass if they're working on the right "side." As a result, the variety of discourse has suffered, and NextDoor has become a fairly uniform political propaganda platform. When my neighbors need to borrow a lawn mower these days, they're more likely to simply send out an e-mail, and I don't blame them.
Blatant leftist policies regarding what can be posted. Every topic that might be of interest to right wing persons (or just honest Americans) like election fraud, January 6 Capitol event, Covid vaccination alternative news and facts, etc. is banned/removed. But no mention of nationwide leftist violence like from BLM so they are apparently allowed. Just as bad as Facebook, Twitter, etc. in their hypocrisy/censoring.
When they allow people to post peoples personal information in order for others to go to their homes, harrass them, etc. and someone gets killed or hurt maybe they will then realize how harmful what they are allowing is. In the world we live in today I think social media sites should be a bit more careful.
The moderators are complete morons. They will bully you and delete only what they disagree about. Very bias site. It's a liberals dream.
If you state an opinion or suggest something that could be helpful, you get attacked! Then when you attack back you get flag and post deleted.
Horrible site
Also some crazy person started stocking my house and threatening me! Yet, the moderator didn't seem to have a problem with that. Only cared if I disagreed with someone.
I will wait until another website comes out that allows free speech and is fair to all members.
NextDoor is a dangerous site and a nut case can stock you if you get his panty in a wad.
Do not use this site unless you don't care about your safety and privacy. Something better will come out and NextDoor will be a distant memory just like MySpace
Site was great for a while, right up until I started reporting trespassers ( all with video evidence to back up what I'm saying.) This culminated with a raving lunatic, who's response to me asking him not to let his dog run on my property was to intentionally trespass, and get in my face screaming "Hit Me!" ( all recorded on the 911 call.) I reported this on Nextdoor. Unfortunately for me, this POS was friends with the moderator, who I had heard negative things about before. The result? Being bullied by a friend of the moderator ( no way to block them on Nextdoor!), called a liar, crazy, and being told that the police would not respond to any further calls and my account eventually deactivated. Stay away: I honestly don't understand how this site hasn't been sued into the stone age.
This site appeals to the people with Gladys Kravitz Syndrome. Paranoid screaming Karens.
The say not to discuss political issues, however if it's someone praising President Biden for his recent visit, they turn the blind eye. God forbid you engage in the post with even a mild mannered criticism of a Democrat. At that point it becomes political, they leave up the original post (which is against their community guidelines to begin with) and remove the negative comments that go against the Führer. Then they suspended my account. Liberating best describes my feelings toward the suspension.
Another San Francisco tech based company. Go figure.
Joined a while back and had no problems until the Lead changed. She would not moderate posts and let threads deteriorate into name calling, trolling and bullying. Completely biased in her own politics and deleted posts on neighborhood issues she did not agree with. She refused to follow Nextdoor Guideline in posting attacks of me and others.
Nextdoor is not going to survive and make money on advertising when neighbor's delete their accounts. I wouldn't be surprised if they get hit with some libel/defamation lawsuits. I am considering it.
The so called "leads" remove any post that disagree with their radical progressive view point. For example, they classify the word "homeless" as offensive, so if you use it, your post is removed. Do not join this garbage platform. Let's druve this company out of business.
The concept is pure gold: a free, come one/come all "bulletin board that enables rave reviews of local service providers and products as well as the occasional warning of a bad experience. But a word of caution is in order: the boundaries for "appropriate comment," as enforced, are frustratingly and unnecessarily narrow. Indeed, there have been times when a mild if disapproving comment disappeared within hours because one voice complained irrationally. Principles of participatory democracy, free speech, and inclusiveness should be revisited and recommitted to. It is not hyperbole to say that the cranks on the margins often hi-jack the otherwise worthy function of Next Door.
Answer: The negative reviews are honest reactions to being duped into sharing too much personal information (that Nextdoor now owns and will NEVER delete and will continue to sell to advertisers until your dying day) to join a site that seems friendly on the surface, but which does NOTHING to protect users. I was bullied by a convicted murderer, who is a Lead in my neighborhood--and I was banned from the site for complaining. Leads are nothing more than early adopters of the site who have been assigned power over other users so that Nextdoor does not have to police it's own site. In short: No. The negative reviews are not wrong. Heed them! I wish I had known before it was too late!
Answer: Forget about nextdoor and leads. Get a life, a real one. Don't waste your time with toxic online communities that tend to get the worst out of people. My advise is run away while you still have some dignity left.
Answer: Kay is right. That is their policy. However, don't expect them to hold to it. We have leads unfairly removing only some people's comments and Nextdoor does nothing about it. Best bet, dump nextdoor.
Answer: Neighborhood. Rocks is in development. Another 6 months.
Answer: Truth is like oil and water. As long as the scam artist have enough venture capital (other people's money) they will continue to shake the bottle leaving it a murky view obscuring the truth. Run out of cash, they'll be exposed for the incompetent boobs they are and the top dogs will clear out their bank accounts and move on to the next scam. One look at their "leading edge tech" pulled right out of the 1980's is proof enough they will die in the tar pits just like the fellow dinosaurs. Want a state of the art app? Check out https://wiggio.com or www.neighborhoodlink.com
Answer: Dallas, SiteJabber rates it at 16%. It would surely rate lower if there weren't so many fake positive reviews. Folks review Nextdoor either 1 or 5. The fives read like ads about Nextdoor's features and potential. The ones are written by real people and give accounts of how awful their experiences were.
Answer: Several other reviewers on this site have had the same thing happen to them. We have been fully banned from nextdoor (beyond just "suspension"), but they keep our profiles, and sometimes our names still appear in the neighbor registry. They refuse to remove us fully, I suppose, in an attempt to misrepresent our endorsement and participation there. It's clearly unethical, but their TOS states that they can do this, as any nd apologist will point out.
Answer: Here's a tidy answer from corporate... Hi Colleen, Thanks for getting back to me. Our Community Guidelines prohibit posting about Lead activity on the main newsfeed. If your Leads are inactivate and youre concerned about moderation in your neighborhood, you should reach out directly to Nextdoor Support. If you have any specific concerns I can help you with at this time, please let me know. Best, Amanda Nextdoor However, the minute you alert corporate to issues with leads in your community you'll find your account terminated. They are very protective of the information surrounding who really is controlling the activities on the boards. Most people in my community are under the misguided impression that corporate is in control. They don't even consider it is their neighbor who sits in judgement.
Answer: Nextdoor wants your full legal name, house number and address and your email address that they link all together. As an added bonus... They have a little map that you can click on. That way if, OMG, you offend someone the little map leads them straight to your house. Run, do not walk, away from this site. No good comes from Nextdoor.
Answer: Your name and address will be known to everyone who uses the NextDoor application and website. I don't suggest using it. I recently discovered that low income apartments in ghetto areas might be able to use the application to do crime. Car theft, asaaults, kidnapping and just about everything else under the sun.
Nextdoor has a rating of 1.9 stars from 2,974 reviews, indicating that most customers are generally dissatisfied with their purchases. Reviewers dissatisfied with Nextdoor most frequently mention social media, real name and free speech. Nextdoor ranks 503rd among Social Network sites.