Community Guidelines Neighbors Businesses Moderators Public Agencies Legal Hi neighbor. We’re glad you’re here. We all play a part in making Nextdoor a welcoming, safe place for everyone. These guidelines are designed to help foster a neighborhood where every neighbor feels at home.
You can contact Nextdoor and find other help resources in a few ways, depending on what support you need. Report a post or neighbor Nextdoor encourages healthy debate and serves as an open, positive platform where neighbors can discuss topics of local interest. We rely on you to report content or other neighbors who violate our Community Guidelines. Learn how to report content or neighbors ...
Be respectful to your neighbors Neighbors Moderators The Community Guidelines outline what is—and isn’t—allowed on Nextdoor. If you see a post or comment that you believe violates the guidelines, you can report it for review. Do not report posts just because you disagree with them.
Neighbors play a key role in helping to keep our community a positive place. If you see something that goes against these guidelines, please use the reporting options below:
How to join Nextdoor (create an account) Neighbors Nextdoor is where you connect to the neighborhoods that matter to you so you can thrive.
Neighbors around the world turn to Nextdoor daily to receive trusted information, give and get help, get things done, and build real-world connections with those nearby — neighbors, businesses, and public services. Learn more about how to join Nextdoor and what you should post on Nextdoor.
Find helpful articles and guides to get started with Nextdoor and make the most of its features for connecting with your community.
Create a group in minutes to organize your local book club, get stuff done with your neighborhood HOA, or take action around a local issue with your neighbors. You can join any open group in your area and request to join any private group in your area.
The new Nextdoor Neighbors Launched in July 2025, the new Nextdoor marks the most significant evolution in our 14-year history with three new, major features along with a refreshed brand and new design to make essential information easier to discover and share.
Sending invitations Neighbors Nextdoor sends invitations on a neighbor’s behalf to other nearby neighbors who aren’t yet on Nextdoor. These could be email or physical mail invitations. How does Nextdoor ensure invitations are sent safely and privacy is maintained? Only confirmed Nextdoor neighbors can send invitations.
TwistedSifter on MSN: Developers tried to rezone a lot into office buildings, but when neighbors threatened legal action, they proposed a 24-h...
Developers tried to rezone a lot into office buildings, but when neighbors threatened legal action, they proposed a 24-h...
Neighbors are required to use their real names to access Nextdoor. However, our system that checks whether your name is real sometimes gets it wrong, and you name needs to be verified by a human. If this is the case for you, please contact us with the following information so we can begin the account creation process for you: Your first and ...
When neighbors include a #hashtag on a post, the #hashtag becomes a clickable link. Clicking it will lead to a hashtag feed of posts that contain the same hashtag. Mentions: Type @ followed by the name of a neighbor, business, or agency to tag them in your post. You can tag any neighbor within 25 miles of your Nextdoor address.
Invitations can only be sent from confirmed Nextdoor neighbors. Every invitation is sent with the senders’ permission. The invitation process is transparent by providing detailed information about what will appear on the invitation, which includes your first name, your neighborhood name, and helpful information about Nextdoor.
Welcome to the February 2026 edition of What's New in Microsoft 365 Copilot! Every month, we highlight new features and enhancements to keep Microsoft 365 admins up to date with Copilot features that help your users be more productive and efficient in the apps they use every day. Also new this month—the Microsoft Agent 365 blog and discussion space on Microsoft Tech Community. We recommend ...
Hey Teams Community, We’re discussing a new feature each week mentioned in the monthly What’s New in Microsoft Teams and this week we’re looking at the ability to pop out shared content into a separate window. The pop out feature in Teams makes it really easy to keep multiple things open at the same time while collaborating.
The Microsoft Community will continue to be at the forefront of exploring these frontiers, driving innovation and ensuring that technology serves humanity. Whether you know it or not, have been to an event online or in person, you are a member of our community. The future also lies in empowering the next generation of tech enthusiasts.
Your community for best practices and the latest news on Azure. For product support, visit Microsoft Q&A;. Get release notes announcements on Azure services and features from under development to retirement.
This edition of North Shore Neighbors features Brett Monahan, a potter for 12 years who works as Studio Manager at Grand Marais Art Colony and built an off-grid home for his family over the ridge in ...
26 U.S. Code § 381 - Carryovers in certain corporate acquisitions U.S. Code Notes prev | next (a) General rule In the case of the acquisition of assets of a corporation by another corporation—
Read details on IRC Section 381—determining treatment of carryovers in certain corporate acquisitions. Review the full-text Code Sec. 381 on Tax Notes.
The telephone country code of Serbia is 381. The country has an open telephone numbering plan, with most numbers consisting of a two- or three-digit area codes and six to seven digits for the subscriber number.
Section 381 provides that a corporation which acquires the assets of another corporation in certain liquidations and reorganizations shall succeed to, and take into account, as of the close of the date of distribution or transfer, the items described in section 381 (c) of the distributor or transferor corporation.
26 CFR 1.381(a)-1 -- General rule relating to carryovers in certain ...