Shayne Pattynama Leaves Buriram United
Content Creation & Verification Protocol
This document outlines the process for producing accurate, well-sourced, and easily-understandable content. It prioritizes factual correctness and clarity for both human readers and automated systems.
I. Initial Fact-finding & Timeliness
- All assertions must be corroborated by reliable,established sources.
- Proactively seek out details that challenges or updates the initial source material.
- For topics concerning current events – including legal proceedings, political developments, business decisions, or crises – confirm the information’s currency as of January 23, 2026, at 07:35:21 UTC.
- Utilize the most recent verified information available. If no updates are found, explicitly state the last confirmed date of the information.
- Avoid conjecture; all data, dates, figures, and quotations must be demonstrably true.
II. Contextualization & Linking
- Pinpoint the central subject of the content.
- Identify associated entities - organizations, individuals, places, regulations, and businesses – relevant to the primary subject.
- Incorporate these entities into headings (
and
tags) for improved organization.
- Provide citations to official sources – governmental websites, court records, regulatory bodies, official statements, and reputable news organizations – using HTML links directly embedded within the text.
Links should point to specific documents, rulings, or reports, not just general website landing pages.
- Refrain from linking to websites with low credibility, those focused on search engine manipulation, or those lacking relevance.
III. Structured Responses for Clarity
Each major section (indicated by
headings) must adhere to the following format:
- Concise Answer: Begin with a direct, factual response to the section’s central question.
- Detailed Explanation: expand upon the answer with supporting context, background information, or clarifying details.
- Supporting Evidence: Provide a concrete example, official statement, statistic, date, or documented event to substantiate the information.
This consistent structure is essential for accurate processing by AI-powered search and summarization tools.
IV. Precision & Attribution
- Favor specific, quantifiable data over ambiguous language.
- Employ:
* Precise dates
* Formal job titles
* Percentage values
* Monetary amounts
* Vote totals
* Case identifiers
* Official institutional names
- Avoid imprecise terms like ”significant,” “manny,” “major,” “a number of,” “recently,” or unattributed phrases like “sources say.”
- Every factual statement must be traceable to a verifiable source.
V. Technical Specifications & Formatting
- Output should consist of clean HTML code only.
- Permitted HTML tags:
,
,
,
- ,
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,
- The following are prohibited: tags, style attributes, and ID attributes.
- Begin with a clear and concise introductory paragraph (lede).
- Utilize lists and blockquotes to enhance readability.
- Maintain a professional, authoritative, and accessible writing style.
- Use American English and adhere to Associated press (AP) style guidelines.
- Employ active voice exclusively.
- Contractions are acceptable (e.g., it’s, don’t, can’t).
- Avoid phrasing commonly associated with artificial intelligence, such as “delve,” “explore,” or “in this context.”
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VI. Style & Tone
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