Child Safety Standards
Servd · AspireCore LLC · Last updated July 10, 2026
Servd is a social dining and nightlife app operated by AspireCore LLC. We have zero tolerance for child sexual abuse and exploitation (CSAE) in any form, anywhere on our platform. This page publishes the standards we hold ourselves and our community to.
1. Servd is an adults-only platform
Servd is for adults 18 and over. Age eligibility is enforced at account creation and again server-side on every session — users who cannot verify an adult birth date cannot create content, join live shows, or message anyone. Minors are not permitted on the platform at all.
2. Prohibited conduct
The following are prohibited absolutely, with no exceptions and no second chances:
- Creating, uploading, sharing, streaming, or requesting child sexual abuse material (CSAM) of any kind, real or synthetic;
- Sexualizing, grooming, or soliciting minors, or attempting to contact minors through Servd;
- Advertising, linking to, or directing users toward CSAE content on any other platform.
Violations result in immediate account termination, content removal, evidence preservation, and reporting to the authorities described below.
3. In-app reporting
Every post, live show, replay, message, and profile in Servd carries a report action. Reports of suspected CSAE are triaged with the highest priority, ahead of all other moderation queues. Users can also block any account instantly.
4. How we respond
- Confirmed or suspected CSAM is removed immediately and the account is terminated;
- We report CSAM to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) and cooperate with law enforcement, preserving evidence as the law requires;
- We comply with all applicable child safety laws in the regions where Servd operates.
5. Child safety point of contact
To report a child safety concern about Servd directly — including from outside the app — contact us. Reports are read by a person, not a queue.
Child safety contact: support@aspirecore.com with the subject line CHILD SAFETY REPORT.
If a child is in immediate danger, contact your local emergency services first. In the United States you can also contact NCMEC at report.cybertip.org.