Editorial Policy
Sourcing Standards
We distinguish between primary sources (testimony, documents, official records), secondary analysis (researcher interpretations, books, documentaries), and speculative frameworks (channeled material, contactee lore, theoretical models). Each article indicates its evidence profile. We do not present speculation as fact; we present it as part of the record.
Framing Claims
When we describe an incident, species, or theory, we use language that reflects how it appears in the source material. "Alleged," "reported," and "claimed" appear where appropriate. We avoid amplifying unsupported conclusions. We cite and link to sources where possible so readers can verify.
Content Updates
Articles are updated when new information, corrections, or significant context becomes available. We note a last-updated date where applicable. Major revisions may be reflected in the article body; minor corrections are made without formal changelogs. See our Research methodology for how we use primary sources and update cycles.