Editorial Policy
SignalFront uses automation to speed up monitoring and page maintenance, but publication depends on evidence. A patch can improve structure, clarity, links, summaries, and schema only when the underlying claim is supported by a listed source or search-performance record.
Source Standard
Priority goes to official changelogs, vendor blogs, product documentation, standards pages, and webmaster guidance. Open-web claims and social chatter are not enough for automatic publication.
AI-Assisted Writing Boundary
AI may propose a structured JSON patch, but it cannot directly publish free-form HTML. Validation checks cited evidence, duplicate risk, visible-source alignment, keyword density, style, and update-date honesty.
Blocked Patterns
- Template language, vague marketing claims, or filler introductions.
- Unsupported superlatives, ranking guarantees, or invented hands-on experience.
- Keyword stuffing, thin rewrites, uncited FAQ answers, and fake freshness.
- Schema that does not match visible page content.
Corrections and Updates
Updates must change visible content or structured evidence. If a source is withdrawn, contradicted, or blocked by robots policy, the related optimization job is skipped until a stronger source is available.
Rollback
Approved patches create a versioned snapshot before publication. If a validation rule misses a problem, the previous article version can be restored from the operations workflow.