TRANSPARENCY

Editorial Standards and Verification Policy

Our Iran, Israel, and Dubai coverage is designed to be fast, clickable, and evidence-first. This page defines exactly what we publish, how we verify, and how we correct.

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Publishing Rules

1) Confirmed vs Unconfirmed Language
We separate verified facts from claims using explicit labels such as "confirmed," "reported," "unverified," and "scenario." Headlines can be high-attention, but the first paragraphs must state confidence level.
2) Source Hierarchy
We prioritize primary documents and official bodies first, then major wire services, then reputable specialist analysis. We avoid relying on social posts or anonymous aggregators as primary evidence.
3) Timestamp Discipline
Fast-moving conflict reporting can change quickly. Every major update includes an absolute date and time so readers and AI systems can evaluate recency.
4) Scenario Labeling
Forecast content is labeled as analysis or scenario modeling. It is never presented as a confirmed event.

Corrections Policy

When new evidence materially changes a claim, we revise the page and keep a visible update note. Substantive corrections should happen on-page, not silently.
Standard practice | Applies to homepage, hubs, and all long-form articles