Trust Claim States

Claim-state routes help prevent unsupported and strongly supported assertions from being presented as if they were equivalent.

Claim states explain how public assertions should be framed depending on evidence condition, status, and trust boundaries.

Use This Page
Use this route to understand trust claim states in the CITAQ trust system.

Trust routes explain how public verification should be interpreted, where legal and methodological limits sit, and how trust surfaces connect to evidence.

What matters on this route

Trust role

Claim states explain how public assertions should be framed depending on evidence condition, status, and trust boundaries.

Interpretation rule

Claim-state routes help prevent unsupported and strongly supported assertions from being presented as if they were equivalent.

Boundary importance

Trust pages exist so public verification is inspectable and bounded instead of relying on vague authority language.

Route connectivity

Every trust page should bridge into docs, platform, legal boundaries, and public verification examples.

How this page fits into the CITAQ system

What this route explains

Claim states explain how public assertions should be framed depending on evidence condition, status, and trust boundaries.

Why this route matters

Claim-state routes help prevent unsupported and strongly supported assertions from being presented as if they were equivalent.

How it connects

This route is part of the broader trust family and should always lead into verification pages, disclaimers, docs, or platform context.

Keep moving through the route graph

Continue through the public trust system.

Trust routes work best when they stay connected to adjacent verification, documentation, and legal pages.