Safety Tips — mmeet
Effective date: April 17, 2026
mmeet is designed to get you from profile to real-life meeting in under 5 minutes. That speed is the point — but it also means a few simple habits make a big difference. Read these tips before your first meeting, and come back any time you need a reminder.
1. Always Meet in Public
- Pick a busy, well-lit place for the first meeting — a café, a park during the day, a central square.
- Avoid private homes, hotel rooms, or isolated locations for a first meeting, no matter how charming the invitation sounds.
- If the other person insists on a private location upfront, that's a red flag. Say no.
2. Tell Someone Where You'll Be
- Share the location and time of the meeting with a friend or family member.
- Agree on a check-in time. A quick "I'm good" text halfway through is enough.
- Share your live location from your phone for the duration of the meeting.
3. Arrive and Leave on Your Own
- Use your own transport — don't let someone pick you up from home or drop you off for a first meeting.
- Keep your home address, workplace, and daily routine private until you know and trust the person.
- Have enough money and a charged phone to get home independently at any moment.
4. Watch the mmeet Video Carefully
- The mmeet video is there to help you decide. Watch it before agreeing to meet.
- If something feels off — the video seems staged, inconsistent with the profile, or makes you uneasy — trust that feeling and skip.
- If you suspect the video isn't authentic, report the profile. Our team reviews every report.
Every photo and mmeet video is screened by AI moderation before it goes live — we automatically reject deepfakes, AI-generated faces, nudity, and content that violates our community guidelines. That's a safety net, not a replacement for your own judgment: if a profile still feels off, skip or report it.
5. Never Send Money or Gifts
- No one you've just met on mmeet needs your money — not for a flight, an emergency, a visa, a sick relative, or a "temporary" loan.
- Never share bank details, card numbers, crypto wallets, or pay-to-unlock codes.
- Requests for money — no matter how emotional or urgent — are the single clearest sign of a scam. Block and report.
6. Trust Your Instincts
- You don't owe anyone a meeting, a second date, or even a polite goodbye.
- If at any moment — before, during, or after the meeting — you feel uncomfortable, leave. You don't need a reason and you don't need permission.
- Pressure, guilt-tripping, or "just one more drink" is not respect. Walk away.
7. Protect Your Personal Information
- Don't share your home address, workplace, daily schedule, or financial details with someone you've just met.
- Be careful with photos that reveal your location, your building, your car's license plate, or your family.
- Keep conversations inside the app until you genuinely trust the person.
8. Report and Block
- Use the report button on any profile that feels unsafe, fake, abusive, or inappropriate.
- Blocking is instant and the other person is not notified.
- Reports help the whole community, not just you — our team reviews every one.
9. Alcohol, Drugs, and Consent
- Know your limits and keep an eye on your drink at all times.
- Consent must be enthusiastic, sober, and ongoing — at every step.
- If a situation becomes sexual and the other person is impaired, or simply unsure, stop. Silence is not a yes.
10. If You Feel Unsafe — Act Immediately
- Go to the nearest public place — a bar, restaurant, shop, hotel lobby — and ask the staff for help.
- Call local emergency services. In the EU dial 112; in the US dial 911.
- After you're safe, report the profile in mmeet so we can take action and prevent it from happening to someone else.
11. Contact
If you have questions about these safety tips, or want to follow up on a report, write to us:
mmeetapp.mail@gmail.com