Legal + Community

Community Guidelines

Learning Rewired Lab is built for learning designers, educators, builders, and curious professionals who care about better learning systems. These guidelines explain the expectations for respectful participation, feedback, sharing, collaboration, and future community spaces.

Last updated: June 2026

1. Purpose of these guidelines

These Community Guidelines apply to interactions connected to Learning Rewired Lab, including comments, replies, messages, submissions, resource feedback, collaboration requests, community spaces, future member areas, events, workshops, product discussions, and related conversations.

The goal is simple: make Learning Rewired Lab a useful, respectful, practical, and intellectually honest place to think out loud about learning design, systems, tools, AI, performance support, and better workplace learning.

2. Be respectful

You are expected to engage with other people respectfully, even when you disagree. Strong opinions are welcome. Personal attacks are not.

Do not harass, threaten, insult, shame, stalk, bully, or target others based on identity, background, beliefs, ability, age, appearance, profession, employer, experience level, or point of view.

3. Debate ideas, not people

Learning Rewired Lab may include critiques of learning design habits, industry incentives, tools, trends, frameworks, AI claims, and workplace learning practices.

Debate is welcome when it is focused on ideas, evidence, tradeoffs, assumptions, and better practice. Do not turn disagreement into personal attacks, pile-ons, name-calling, or bad-faith arguments.

4. No harassment or abusive behavior

Harassment, intimidation, threats, hate speech, slurs, repeated unwanted contact, sexual harassment, doxxing, or abusive behavior are not allowed.

Learning Rewired Lab may remove content, block access, decline collaboration, or restrict participation when behavior crosses that line.

5. No spam, scams, or manipulation

Do not use Learning Rewired Lab spaces, forms, comments, messages, or future community features to post spam, scams, phishing attempts, misleading promotions, irrelevant self-promotion, malware, deceptive links, fake engagement, or manipulative content.

Sharing relevant work, tools, examples, or resources is welcome when it contributes to the conversation and is not just drive-by promotion wearing a tiny fake mustache.

6. Share responsibly

Do not post or submit confidential, proprietary, private, regulated, or sensitive information unless you have permission and the information is appropriate to share.

This includes client information, learner data, employee records, student records, internal business documents, private screenshots, unreleased product plans, passwords, credentials, or personally identifiable information.

7. Respect intellectual property

Only share content, examples, screenshots, templates, prompts, files, images, code, or resources that you have the right to share.

Do not upload, submit, copy, or distribute someone else’s work in a way that violates copyright, licensing terms, confidentiality agreements, platform rules, or professional obligations.

See also: Copyright & IP Notice and Resource License.

8. Attribution matters

If you reference another person’s idea, framework, example, quote, article, template, or resource, provide credit where appropriate.

Learning design is already too full of recycled diagrams in witness protection. Give people credit when their work helped shape yours.

9. Use AI responsibly

AI-assisted contributions, prompts, examples, drafts, prototypes, or submissions should be reviewed before sharing. Do not use AI to generate spam, impersonation, misinformation, harassment, fake expertise, or misleading claims.

Do not submit confidential, proprietary, regulated, or sensitive information into AI-enabled tools, prompts, or workflows unless you understand how that information will be handled and have permission to use it.

See also: AI Disclosure and AI Usage Policy.

10. Feedback should help

Learning Rewired Lab is built around the belief that feedback should coach, not just grade. That applies to community interaction too.

When giving feedback, aim to be specific, useful, honest, and respectful. “This is terrible” is not feedback. “This part confused me because…” is much more useful.

11. No professional advice claims

Community discussions may include ideas about learning design, accessibility, AI, workplace learning, performance support, tools, business models, or professional practice.

Do not present yourself as providing legal, medical, financial, mental health, HR, compliance, security, accessibility certification, or other specialized professional advice unless you are qualified to do so and the context clearly supports it.

See also: Disclaimer.

12. Keep future community spaces useful

If Learning Rewired Lab adds member areas, comments, resource submissions, community discussions, workshops, office hours, product feedback spaces, or collaborative features, these guidelines will apply to those spaces.

Additional rules may be posted for specific programs, events, paid products, submissions, or private communities.

13. Resource submissions and examples

Learning Rewired Lab may invite examples, feedback, suggestions, questions, resource ideas, prototype requests, or community submissions.

By submitting content, you confirm that you have the right to submit it and that it does not violate confidentiality, privacy, intellectual property, employment, client, platform, or legal obligations.

Submitting an idea, suggestion, or resource request does not guarantee that it will be published, credited, accepted, used, or compensated.

14. Moderation and enforcement

Learning Rewired Lab may remove content, ignore submissions, block users, restrict access, decline collaboration, cancel participation, or take other reasonable action when these guidelines are violated.

Enforcement decisions may depend on context, severity, repeated behavior, platform limitations, safety concerns, legal obligations, or operational capacity.

15. Reporting concerns

If you see content or behavior connected to Learning Rewired Lab that appears to violate these guidelines, you can report it through the contact page.

Please include the relevant URL, screenshot, username, message, date, platform, or context when possible.

Contact Learning Rewired Lab

16. Relationship to other policies

These Community Guidelines should be read together with the Terms, Privacy Policy, Cookie Notice, Disclaimer, Copyright & IP Notice, Resource License, AI Disclosure, AI Usage Policy, and any product-specific or community-specific rules.

Related pages: Terms, Privacy Policy, Resource License, Legal Contact.

17. Updates to these guidelines

These Community Guidelines may be updated as Learning Rewired Lab evolves, especially if comments, submissions, community features, paid memberships, workshops, private spaces, or account-based tools are added.

The “Last updated” date at the top of this page will reflect the most recent version.

Note: These guidelines are provided for general community governance and transparency. They are not legal advice. As Learning Rewired Lab grows into paid products, member spaces, submissions, workshops, AI tools, or community features, these guidelines should be reviewed and updated with qualified legal guidance.