Websites and social networks

The following is a list of websites and social networks and their recognition of nonbinary gender identity in their user forms. For many nonbinary people, the most undesirable sites are those which require all users to mark their gender as either "female" or "male" with no other options. Similarly bad are sites that mark this choice as "sex" rather than "gender". Sites that are more friendly to nonbinary people include those which allow users write in their own gender, provide a wide variety of gender options to choose from within a drop-down menu, give a third gender option such as "other", or don't ask about gender at all. Some sites also ask about a user's title or pronouns, and ideally let users include more than the standard binary options for these.

How to use this page
For easy skimming, the tables on this page use a colour code, loosely based on traffic lights, to show how friendly a site is to nonbinary people:

A white background means we don't have information about this site yet, or that there is some other situation (these situations should be described when possible).
 * Blue (#9ff) means it's friendly to nonbinary people. For example, you can write in your gender (even blank it) or opt out of showing it.
 * Green (#9f9) means it does not ask.
 * Yellow (#ffb) means it's partly friendly to nonbinary people. For example, users must choose between showing a gender that is female, male, or other.
 * Red (#f99) means it's not friendly at all to nonbinary people. For example, it may require all users to be openly listed as male or female.

If you want to quickly create an entry for a site but don't want to tangle with the tables, use the list below as a template for writing a draft of an entry in list form instead. This can then be put on the talk page, and an administrator will add it into the table for you.


 * Site name, web address, and purpose.


 * User sex/gender: Does the software require users to choose a sex/gender? Does it call it a sex or a gender? What options does it give for users to choose from? Does it allow write-in genders?


 * User titles: Does the software call users by titles and honorifics? What options does it give for users to choose their own titles? Does it allow write-in titles?


 * User pronouns: Does the software call users by pronouns? What options does it give to users for choosing their own pronouns? Does it allow write-in titles?


 * Legal name policy: Does the site require users to give their legal name? Yes/no. Note how this is enforced.


 * Other notes: Tell anything else relevant about how the site's software or administrators treat trans, nonbinary, and intersex issues.

Social media and Forums
Some websites allow one to hide gender or sex selection or choose none, choose other, or (more rarely) provide trans/nonbinary/intersex selections. Listed in alphabetical order.