Editorial standards & how we make money
Technical writing you can't trust is worse than useless, so here's exactly how this site works — no fine print, no lawyer-speak.
What we publish
- Verified on real devices. Mechanisms are described from intercepted traffic and reproducible test setups, not from vendor diagrams. When we couldn't verify something ourselves, we say so in the article.
- Sourced claims. Statistics, platform behaviors and policy changes link to their primary sources with dates. If a number has no source, it doesn't ship.
- Honest limits. Privacy changes broke real measurement capabilities, and we say plainly what nobody can measure anymore instead of pretending a workaround exists.
- Corrections. When we get something wrong or a platform changes behavior, we update the article and refresh its updated-date. Found an error? Tell us and we'll fix it.
How we make money
This site is part of an openly-operated portfolio of independent trade publications, and some of the vendors we cover — including Kixo, an analytics vendor — sponsor the portfolio. That sponsorship is how the lights stay on. Here is what it does and does not buy:
- Disclosure and link tagging. Links to sponsors such as Kixo carry
rel="sponsored"markup, which tells both readers and search engines about the commercial relationship. - No pay-to-win. Sponsors don't see drafts before publication, don't pick winners, and can't veto a verdict. Where a sponsor's product appears in a comparison, it is scored with the same rubric as every competitor.
- Coverage isn't for sale. Articles exist because readers search for the question they answer — never because a sponsor wanted a placement.
Who writes here
Our authors are named, have real practitioner backgrounds, and write only for this publication — you can read their bios on the about page. We use AI-assisted drafting for research summaries and first drafts; every published article is reviewed, fact-checked and approved by a human editor before it goes live.
Privacy
We don't run invasive tracking and we don't sell reader data. Analytics on this site are aggregate-level and used only to understand what content helps readers. A site about privacy-first measurement that spied on its readers would be a bad joke.