Editorial Standards

Editorial Standards

The practical rules behind accuracy, moderation, disclosure, and editorial independence.

Evidence Labels Independence

Separate fact and judgment

Descriptions, caveats, recommendations, and opinions should not blur into one unsupported claim.

Avoid false certainty

When testing is shallow, the page should say so instead of implying a deeper verdict.

Vendor input is limited

Vendor information can correct facts, but it does not control rankings, verdicts, or trust labels.

OSINT4ALL aims to publish practical, defensible, and clearly labeled content.

Accuracy and confidence

We separate facts from opinion, show commercial context when relevant, review corrections before changing public content, and avoid language that overstates confidence. We prefer clarity over hype and context over raw aggregation.

Independence

Editorial independence matters more than convenience. Vendor input can improve accuracy, but it does not grant editorial control over verdicts, rankings, or trust framing.

Reader-first framing

When a tool, review, or comparison has limits, the page should say so. A professional reader is better served by a clear caveat than by inflated certainty.