Thursday, January 13, 2011

Ageless Beauty Comment Manifesto

No NastinessOccasionally I delete a comment from my blog. It’s my blog, after all, but there are very few rules at Ageless Beauty.

I welcome reader feedback and questions, even recommendations of products I’m not familiar with, so long as they’re not intended to get free advertising for a product the commenter is selling.

I had to delete a comment today which was a blatant attempt to attract my readers to a sales site for 7 injectable peptides that you mix and inject into yourself. Can you believe that?!

The commenter purported to offer comprehensive information on peptides and what they do.

However, the website banner says, this site "is used for entertainment purposes only and does not represent nor replace the advice of a doctor."

I don't think that's the type of information my readers are looking for.

The Ageless Beauty Cosmeceutical Peptide Glossary provides science-based information on a bevy of topical cosmeceutical peptides in layman's language.

Note to injectable peptide commenter: If you want to advertise, find other sleazy sites which will accept your ads. I wouldn't put one of your ads on Ageless Beauty if you paid for it.

We review all ads for content, except for Google ads which are placed by Google. We've even had some of those banned for inappropriate content that slipped through Google's content review process.

The Comment Rules at Ageless Beauty are Simple

We don’t accept:

• Blatant attempts for free advertising;
• Mean-spirited comments like “If your site is named Ageless Beauty, how come you look so old”;
• Spam;
• Pornography;
• Comments that are completely irrelevant to the topic at hand.

All others are welcome. I want Ageless Beauty to be the kind of site you could bring home to Mom ;-)


Tags: Top Ten Anti-Aging Products, cosmeceutical peptides, Ageless Beauty blog rules,

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