On this page
What linkboo allows, in plain language
Most acceptable-use pages are written by lawyers for other lawyers and tell you nothing about what you can actually run on the platform. This one is meant to be read by the person making the decision about whether linkboo fits their business. If your category is named below as allowed, it is allowed — subject to the compliance requirements alongside it. If your category isn't named, it's almost certainly allowed too; the named ones are the ones that get blocked elsewhere and need explicit clarity.
Linkboo welcomes all legal categories, including regulated niches such as compounded medications, hormone-replacement clinics, and research-chemical retailers, provided you comply with destination-platform policies. That's the sentence. The rest of this page is the specifics behind it.
What's explicitly allowed (including the regulated niches)
linkboo is designed for legitimate businesses across the legal economy. The categories below are all welcome:
- Standard creator economy. Content creators, affiliates, musicians, podcasters, newsletter writers, course sellers, e-commerce operators, agencies, labels, media properties.
- Adult content (where legal). OnlyFans creators, Fansly creators, Fanvue creators, AdmireMe creators, JustForFans creators, and adjacent creator-subscription platforms. Adult content is a legitimate category and we serve it without apology.
- Compounded medications (pharmacy and clinic operators). Compounding pharmacies, telehealth platforms dispensing compounded medications, and clinics whose bio link directs to a licensed pharmacy. Compliance requirement: you must be a licensed entity in your jurisdiction; the destination must be your own controlled checkout, not a marketplace where listings change without your control.
- Hormone-replacement clinics (TRT, HRT, peri/menopause). Licensed telehealth providers and brick-and-mortar clinics. Compliance requirement: practice-license verifiable; destination resolves to your clinic's intake form or platform, not to an aggregator. See /for/hormone-clinics.
- Research-chemical retailers (legal jurisdictions). Operators selling research chemicals for legitimate research use in jurisdictions where this is legal. Compliance requirement: destination clearly labels research-only intent and complies with applicable jurisdictional restrictions; products listed must not be Schedule I/II controlled substances in any jurisdiction you ship to.
- Peptide research suppliers. Suppliers of research-grade peptides to credentialed researchers and labs. Compliance requirement: destination labels research-only use; no medical claims; no implication of human consumption. See /for/peptides.
- SARMs retailers (legal jurisdictions). Where the sale of selective androgen receptor modulators for research is legal in your jurisdiction. Compliance requirement: research-only labeling; no human-consumption claims; jurisdictional compliance. See /for/sarms.
- Nootropics retailers. Cognitive-enhancement supplements where the specific compounds are legal in jurisdictions you ship to. Compliance requirement: no medical claims beyond what your jurisdiction allows for supplement marketing. See /for/nootropics.
- Med-spas and aesthetic clinics. Licensed med-spas, injectors, aesthetic dermatology practices. Compliance requirement: practice-license verifiable. See /for/med-spas.
- Weight-loss clinics and GLP-1 providers. Telehealth and brick-and-mortar weight-loss clinics, including GLP-1 prescribers (semaglutide, tirzepatide). Compliance requirement: licensed prescribing practice; destination resolves to your intake or platform; advertising claims comply with FDA and state guidance. See /for/glp-1-clinics.
- Telehealth more broadly. Mental health platforms, primary care, dermatology, sleep clinics, ED clinics, fertility clinics. Standard compliance requirement: licensed providers. See /for/telehealth.
- Crypto, DeFi, NFT projects (legitimate operators). Operating legally in your jurisdiction; not a phishing front for a legitimate-looking project.
- Firearms accessories, ammunition, and lawful gun retailers (in jurisdictions where this is lawful). Compliance requirement: federal and state licensing.
- Cannabis (in legal jurisdictions). Dispensaries, brands, and ancillary services operating in jurisdictions where cannabis is legal at the state/provincial level.
...and other regulated niches we'll add dedicated pages for as audience signal warrants.
If your category isn't in this list and you're wondering — it's likely allowed and we just didn't think to name it. The list above is the categories where existing tools quietly reject you and you'd reasonably want explicit confirmation.
The compliance posture, plainly
For every category listed above, the underlying rules are the same:
- Be a legitimate operator. A licensed entity if your category requires licensing. A real business with real ownership.
- Comply with destination-platform policies. Instagram, TikTok, Meta Ads, Google Ads, Stripe, your fulfillment partners — they all have category-specific rules. linkboo does not relax their rules; we serve as the bio link, not as a regulatory shield. If TikTok blocks links to peptide retailers in your region, linkboo cannot bypass that block.
- Don't misrepresent. If the destination labels research-only use, the marketing surrounding it should be consistent.
- Don't ship to jurisdictions where you aren't compliant. This is yours to manage, not ours.
When the requirements above are met, linkboo serves your category the same way it serves a creator selling a $40 skincare product.
What linkboo does not allow
The list of disallowed uses is short and specific:
- Illegal activity in any meaningful jurisdiction. CSAM (zero tolerance, immediate suspension, reported to NCMEC), trafficking, terrorism financing, fraud schemes (Ponzi, rug pulls, fake-brand counterfeits intended to deceive buyers).
- Direct phishing. Links designed to harvest credentials by impersonating banks, exchanges, or login portals.
- Malware distribution. Drive-by exploits, trojanized installers.
- Targeted harassment. linkboo pages built primarily to direct abuse at named individuals.
- Doxing. Pages publishing private personal information for harassment purposes.
- CSAM, period. Worth saying twice.
- Hard-prohibited drugs. Cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine, fentanyl, and other Schedule I/II substances in any jurisdiction we operate in. (This is distinct from compounded medications prescribed lawfully; the line is whether a licensed prescriber is involved.)
- Weapons categorically illegal at the federal level in any jurisdiction we operate in. Untraceable ghost guns, fully automatic conversions in the US, etc.
That's roughly it. The rest of legitimate commerce is welcome.
How we enforce
- At signup: signup form rejects accounts targeting the categorically prohibited list.
- At link creation: destination domains are checked against the SafeBrowsing / phishing feeds. Known-bad destinations are blocked.
- Ongoing: account reviews are triggered by abuse reports, anomalous behavior (sudden mass-link creation, sudden phishing-pattern destinations), and routine sampling.
- Appeals: every action is appealable. Email trust@link.boo to contest a suspension or removal. We aim to respond within 24 business hours and resolve within 5 business days.
Why this page is structured this way
The reason we name the regulated niches explicitly is that the silent reject is worse than the explicit refusal. A compounded-medications clinic that signs up, builds a page, drives traffic, and then has their links blocked or their account suspended without warning has lost real time and real money. Telling them upfront, in clear language, what we accept and what we don't — even when the answer is "yes, we accept you" — is the version of acceptable-use page that actually serves the operator making the decision.
If you're operating in one of the named categories above, the /for/ pages for each are the persona-specific entry points. They are deliberately understated; they don't celebrate the categories or pretend to be advocacy pages. They're just functional landing pages for the use case. That's the right register.