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Disclosure

How AI Tool Graph separates source-backed facts, commercial status, analytics, and external destinations.

/disclosure
01

Facts boundary

AI Tool Graph publishes factual registry records: identity, official links, capabilities, access surfaces, pricing routes, evidence, freshness, and publication state.

Relationship and context fields stay outside public claims until they are source-backed and ready for publication.

Those records are not recommendations. They should help readers inspect what is known, what is source-backed, and what still needs review.

included

Source-backed facts

Fields should be traceable to official or otherwise labeled source material with visible freshness and review state.

excluded

Editorial verdicts

Ordered buyer-guidance lists, reviews, buyer verdicts, star-style labels, and numeric quality marks are not canonical registry facts.

visible

Missing information

Unknown or unverified values should remain empty, stale, or review-needed rather than being filled with invented certainty.

02

No paid placement

AI Tool Graph is not built as a paid-placement directory. A public facts record should not appear, disappear, or move because of sponsorship.

If any future commercial relationship affects a link destination or page module, the commercial status should be labeled separately from evidence and should not change source review state.

  • Commercial status is not evidence.
  • Sponsorship should not decide inclusion, ordering, source review, freshness, or canonical facts.
  • A tool can have a public record even when no commercial relationship exists.
  • A commercial destination must not be presented as an official source unless it is actually source material for the claim.
03

Source review boundary

Official source material can change without notice. Public registry pages should show the source trail when a field becomes stale, incomplete, or wrong.

Source review can update a value, add a source, mark a field for review, or keep a claim out of public facts until the source state is clearer.

preferredOfficial pricing pages, product documentation, changelogs, terms, trust pages, and company announcements.
acceptedOfficial help centers, marketplace listings, and app-store listings when they clarify access or availability.
weakThird-party references, summaries, and community notes. These can guide review but should be labeled as weaker evidence.
04

Analytics boundary

When enabled, public-site analytics such as Google Analytics or Microsoft Clarity may help measure page views, referrers, performance, and broad interaction quality.

Analytics signals do not determine registry facts. They should not convert a tool into a recommendation, change source review, create pricing claims, or replace official source review.

  • Analytics can show which public pages need attention or are hard to use.
  • Analytics cannot prove a product claim, a pricing fact, or a capability claim.
  • Source-backed review remains the preferred path for changing registry facts.
05

External destination boundary

Official links and evidence URLs may lead to third-party sites. After a reader leaves AI Tool Graph, the destination controls its own pricing, account flows, cookies, privacy behavior, and support process.

Readers should confirm important pricing, plan limits, legal terms, security posture, and account requirements directly with the source before making a purchase or deployment decision.

06

Disclosure review

If a page appears to mix source evidence with commercial language, hides a stale source, or presents a subjective judgment as a fact, send the page URL and the specific claim for review.

  • Include the affected page URL.
  • Quote or summarize the exact field, sentence, link, or claim.
  • Include the strongest official source available.
  • Explain whether the issue is factual, commercial, analytics-related, or presentation-related.