Trust and Verification
This route matters because the architecture explicitly distinguishes higher-trust evidence from lower-trust social or unsupported signals.
Evidence seniority hierarchy explains why stronger evidence sources should outweigh weaker consensus or assertion layers in public trust interpretation.
Trust routes explain how public verification should be interpreted, where legal and methodological limits sit, and how trust surfaces connect to evidence.
Key Points
Evidence seniority hierarchy explains why stronger evidence sources should outweigh weaker consensus or assertion layers in public trust interpretation.
This route matters because the architecture explicitly distinguishes higher-trust evidence from lower-trust social or unsupported signals.
Trust pages exist so public verification is inspectable and bounded instead of relying on vague authority language.
Every trust page should bridge into docs, platform, legal boundaries, and public verification examples.
Route Detail
Evidence seniority hierarchy explains why stronger evidence sources should outweigh weaker consensus or assertion layers in public trust interpretation.
This route matters because the architecture explicitly distinguishes higher-trust evidence from lower-trust social or unsupported signals.
This route is part of the broader trust family and should always lead into verification pages, disclaimers, docs, or platform context.
Connected Routes
Return to the main trust hub for the broader public trust model.
Review the point-in-time language and legal boundary behind trust output.
Use the docs system for deeper method and policy detail around this trust topic.
See which parts of the verification stack eventually produce the trust behavior explained here.
Next Step
Trust routes work best when they stay connected to adjacent verification, documentation, and legal pages.