OKtoMeet
Issue No. 01LegalSafety & in-person meetings
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Legal

Safety & in-person meetings

Last updated: April 2026

Why this matters

OKtoMeet is built around real-world meetings. That comes with the same care you’d use for any professional introduction: clear expectations, mutual respect, and attention to your own comfort and security.

Meeting people you met online

  • Prefer public first meetings. Coffee shops, hotel lobbies, conference venues, or coworking spaces are easier to leave than private residences or isolated locations.
  • Share plans on your terms. You are never required to share your home address, room number, or real-time location with someone you don’t trust.
  • Use your judgment. If something feels off, you can decline, reschedule, or leave. No professional opportunity requires you to ignore your instincts.
  • Verify identity gradually. Profiles and optional verification help, but they don’t replace sound judgment. Treat new connections like any other professional relationship—build trust over time.

Travel and events

When you attend events or meet people in cities you don’t know well, consider timezone fatigue, local norms, and how you’ll get home. Let a colleague or friend know you’re meeting someone if that helps you feel safer—many travelers do this routinely.

Harassment and misconduct

Unwanted contact, pressure, discrimination, or sexual harassment are not acceptable on or off the platform. Use reporting and blocking tools in the app, and contact local authorities if you are in immediate danger.

Reporting

If someone violates these expectations or our Community Guidelines, report them through the product (for example, profile or message reporting). We review reports seriously and may suspend accounts when needed.

Not emergency services

OKtoMeet cannot provide real-time monitoring or emergency response. If you are in danger, contact local emergency services first.