Method

The job is not to sound certain. The job is to show what the public evidence supports, what it does not support, and what remains worth checking.

Frame the decision

Define the question, decision context, useful output, and what will not be covered.

Map source classes

Identify public source classes before searching: filings, notices, records, web pages, archives, and official material.

Separate fact from inference

Keep directly sourced facts separate from interpretation, assumption, and open question.

Label confidence

Use High, Medium, or Low confidence with a short rationale and known limits.

Confidence labels

A claim can be useful without being final. Every briefing keeps a visible separation between sourced fact, inference, uncertainty, and recommended next checks.

High

Direct public-source support

Multiple reliable sources or a primary record support the point.

Medium

Supported but bounded

Evidence points in a direction but depends on scope, timing, or source context.

Low

Open question

Signals exist, but the source base is not strong enough for a firm conclusion.

Source discipline

Uncovered Truths uses public evidence, named source classes, and explicit limits. It does not publish health claims, miracle technologies, legal accusations, investment advice, or active-crime allegations as launch topics.

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