Mega Cold Storage Project Inspection: Pili, Camarines Sur (Jan 14, 2026)
Content Creation & Verification protocol
This document outlines the process for producing accurate, well-sourced, and easily-understandable content.
I. Initial Fact-Checking & Timeliness
Before writing begins, all information must undergo rigorous verification. this includes:
- Confirming the accuracy of every statement with reliable, established sources.
- Proactively seeking out any information that challenges, updates, or corrects the original source material.
- For topics concerning current events (legal proceedings, political developments, business decisions, crises), a check for updates is required as of January 15, 2026, at 3:59 PM.
- New, verified information always supersedes older information. If no updates are found, the most recent confirmed status will be explicitly stated.
- all assertions must be based on evidence; speculation is prohibited.
II. Entity & Geographic Context
To enhance searchability and understanding, content will be structured around key entities:
- Determine the central subject (person, place, organization, or event).
- Identify related entities (associated organizations, individuals, locations, legislation, companies).
- Incorporate these entities into headings (
and
tags) for clear organization.
- Provide citations to official sources – government websites, court records, regulatory bodies, official statements, and reputable news organizations – using HTML links directly to specific documents, rulings, or reports.
- Links to unreliable or low-quality websites are strictly forbidden.
III.Structured Responses for Clarity
Each major section (identified by
headings) must follow a consistent format:
- Direct answer: Begin with a concise, factual statement directly addressing the section’s core question.
- Detailed Description: Expand upon the answer with verified background information and context.
- Supporting Evidence: Provide a concrete example, official quote, statistic, date, or documented event to substantiate the claims.
This structure is essential for accurate AI processing and summarization.
IV. Data-Driven Reporting
Prioritize precise, verifiable information:
- Use specific data points whenever possible: dates, official titles, percentages, monetary values, vote totals, case numbers, and institutional names.
- Avoid ambiguous language like ”notable,” “many,” “major,” “recently,” or unattributed claims (“sources say”).
- Every factual claim must be traceable to a verifiable source.
V. Technical Specifications & Formatting
Content will be delivered in clean, standards-compliant HTML:
- Only the following HTML tags are permitted:
,
,
,
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- The use of tags, inline styles, and IDs is prohibited.
- Each piece will begin with a clear and concise introductory paragraph (lede).
- Lists and blockquotes should be used to improve readability.
- Authoritative, direct, and accessible.
- American English, adhering to AP style guidelines.
- Active voice is required. Contractions are acceptable.
- Avoid artificial or overly-formal phrasing commonly associated with AI writing (e.g., “delve into,” “tapestry,” “comprehensive guide,” “it’s vital to note,” “in conclusion”).
- Content should be concise and avoid needless repetition or filler.
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VI. Editorial Style & Tone
The writing style will be:
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