Curiosity works best when the audience can see what is known, what is inferred, and what remains uncertain.

Research and sourcing

We prioritize primary research, government and university material, official records, and established professional organizations. Secondary reporting may provide context, but extraordinary or high-impact claims should be traceable to the strongest available evidence.

Fact, analysis, and speculation

Articles should distinguish documented facts from interpretation and open questions. A patent, proposal, simulation, anecdote, or unexplained event is not presented as proof that a capability exists or a claim is true.

Health, science, finance, and public affairs

These subjects receive additional source review. Educational content does not replace professional medical, legal, or financial advice. Preliminary, animal, laboratory, and observational findings are identified where relevant and are not described as proven human treatments.

Corrections and updates

When a material error is confirmed, we correct the article promptly and update its modification date. Significant changes should be explained within the article. Minor spelling or formatting changes may be made without a correction note.

AI-assisted work

Automation may help organize metadata, transcripts, or drafts, but indexable articles require human review. AI output is not treated as a source.

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