I’m Not the Only One — And the Receipts Are Public

If anyone thought I was the only one frustrated with how Nextdoor is being run—think again. I’m sharing public proof from X and from current and former users who are voicing dissatisfaction with:

- Anonymous volunteer moderators with no real accountability

- Inconsistent suspensions and enforcement

- A lack of true support when it matters most

I may be the most vocal—but only because I’ve been consistent.

This week’s virtual Q4 Earnings Call matters. I submitted the following question on January 22, 2026, to Nextdoor’s Senior Management Team (not using the word “leaders” intentionally):

Can management quantify how moderation practices and account suspensions impact reported active users, advertiser reach, and revenue growth — including whether suspended or indefinitely restricted accounts are included in engagement metrics provided to investors — and outline what specific changes are planned in 2026 to improve transparency, consistency, and trust in moderation and user engagement?

I’m not seeking acknowledgment for ego. I’m seeking it for the health of a company in which I am a shareholder. The Board of Directors, investors, shareholders, and advertisers are right to ask: when does this ship pivot?

Last week’s slide in $NXDR is unacceptable. A buyout—or golden parachutes for senior management holding significant equity—rewards mediocrity. Accountability, transparency, and measurable change should come first.

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#NiravTolia #Nextdoor #NXDR #Accountability #CorporateGovernance #InvestorRelations #Transparency #Moderation #DigitalCommunities #Shareholders

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