Section 1
1. Respect Every Match
Ome Call is designed for spontaneous live video chat, but every match still involves a real person. Treat strangers with basic courtesy and leave the conversation if it is not a fit.
- Do not insult, shame, threaten, stalk, or pressure other users.
- Do not use hateful, discriminatory, or degrading language.
- Do not continue behavior after another person clearly says no or leaves.
Section 2
2. Camera and Content Safety
Use camera and microphone features responsibly. A safe video chat environment depends on users avoiding content that shocks, exploits, threatens, or harms others.
- No explicit sexual acts, nudity, sexual coercion, or exploitative material.
- No violence, self-harm encouragement, gore, weapons threats, or dangerous stunts.
- No underage content, grooming, sexualized minors, or attempts to contact minors inappropriately.
- No scams, impersonation, spam, or attempts to move users into unsafe payment or identity-sharing flows.
Section 3
3. Protect Privacy
Do not expose another person’s private information. In random video chat, users may not know who they are matched with, so privacy boundaries matter from the first second.
- Do not share another user’s face, voice, name, contact details, location, or screenshots without permission.
- Do not ask for passwords, verification codes, payment information, identity documents, or private images.
- Avoid showing sensitive background details if you do not want them visible in a live chat.
Section 4
4. Reporting Unsafe Behavior
If a match feels unsafe or violates these guidelines, leave the chat and use available reporting or support channels. Reports help us identify patterns and improve moderation coverage.
When to Report
Report harassment, nudity, threats, scams, underage risk, impersonation, stalking, hate, or repeated abusive behavior.
What Helps Review
Include the approximate time, what happened, and screenshots or recordings only if they are lawful and necessary for the report.
Section 5
5. Enforcement Actions
Violations may lead to warnings, removed access, feature restrictions, match limits, account action, or escalation to appropriate channels when law or safety requires it.
These guidelines may be updated as Ome Call learns from user reports, product changes, abuse patterns, and safety requirements.
Section 6
6. Consent and Personal Boundaries
Consent matters in live video chat. Do not pressure another person to stay, reveal private details, move to another platform, show anything they do not want to show, or continue a topic after they have made discomfort clear.
- Leave room for the other person to decline, skip, or end the chat.
- Do not use threats, gifts, emotional pressure, or repeated requests to force participation.
- Do not sexualize a conversation that the other person has not invited.
Section 7
7. Recording, Screenshots, and Reuse
Random video chat can include faces, voices, rooms, and personal background details. Treat that information carefully.
- Do not record, screenshot, publish, sell, or share another user’s image, voice, or chat without permission where required.
- Do not use another user’s content for blackmail, harassment, impersonation, ridicule, or public exposure.
- If local law requires consent for recording, you are responsible for following it.
Section 8
8. Spam, Scams, and Platform Abuse
Ome Call is not a place for fraud, traffic hijacking, automated abuse, or deceptive promotion.
- Do not post spam, phishing links, malware, fake giveaways, investment schemes, or adult-service solicitations.
- Do not impersonate Ome Call staff, creators, public figures, or other users.
- Do not use automation, scraping, fake traffic, repeated reconnect abuse, or attempts to manipulate matching systems.
Section 9
9. Review Requests and Guideline Updates
If you believe an enforcement action was applied by mistake, contact [email protected] with relevant context. We may not reverse every decision, but clear information helps us review serious mistakes.
We may update these Community Guidelines as Ome Call changes, as new abuse patterns appear, or as safety expectations for moderated chat evolve.