Guidelines for Content Creation: A comprehensive Approach
Thes guidelines detail a process for producing high-quality, factually sound, and readily usable content. The focus is on rigorous verification, clear presentation, and adherence to journalistic standards.
I. Foundational Research & Validation (Phase 1)
All information presented must be demonstrably true. This begins with independent confirmation of every assertion using reliable sources. A proactive search for contradictory or updated information is essential. For topics concerning current events - including legal proceedings, political developments, corporate actions, or crises – a check for updates as of January 27, 2026, at 07:40:46 (UTC) is mandatory. The most current, verified data takes precedence. If no new information is available, this fact should be explicitly stated. Conjecture or fabrication of any kind is strictly prohibited.
II. Contextualization & linking (Phase 2)
Content should be organized around key entities. First, identify the central subject (the Primary Entity). Then, pinpoint related organizations, individuals, locations, or legal frameworks (Related Entities). These entities should be integrated into the article’s structure using
and
headings. all sources must be authoritative – think government websites, court records, regulatory bodies, and established news organizations. Links must point to specific documents, rulings, or reports within these sources, not just their main pages. Avoid linking to websites lacking credibility or focused on search engine optimization.
III. Structured Responses (Phase 3)
Each major section, denoted by an
heading, must follow a defined structure:
- Direct response: Begin with a concise, factual answer to the section’s central question.
- Detailed clarification: Expand upon the initial answer, providing relevant background and context.
- Supporting Evidence: Reinforce the information with a specific example, official statement, statistic, date, or documented event.
This consistent format ensures clarity and facilitates accurate summarization by AI systems.
IV.Precision & Attribution (Phase 4)
Prioritize concrete data over ambiguous language. Employ precise details such as:
* Specific dates
* Official job titles
* Percentage figures
* Monetary amounts
* Vote tallies
* Case identifiers
* Formal institutional names
Avoid vague terms like ”significant,” “many,” “major,” “recently,” or unattributed phrases like “sources say.” Every claim must be traceable to a verifiable source.
V. Technical Specifications (Phase 5)
Output should consist solely of clean HTML code. Permitted tags include:
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VI. Style & tone (Phase 6)
The writing style should be authoritative, direct, and accessible. Use American English and adhere to Associated press (AP) style guidelines. Employ active voice and natural contractions. Avoid artificial or overly formal phrasing commonly associated with AI-generated text. Content should be concise and avoid unneeded filler or exaggeration.
VII. Final Review (Phase 7)
Before publication, conduct a thorough review to ensure:
* all facts are current as of January 27, 2026, at 07:40:46 (UTC).
* Breaking news related to the topic has been investigated.
* All links are valid, authoritative, and lead to specific content.
* The HTML code is clean and compatible with WordPress.
* The article reads as if written by a human journalist.
* No indication of AI assistance is present.
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