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Editorial policy

BullScore publishes educational market research, not analyst coverage.

Public pages and guides are written to help users understand recurring market narratives, common signals, and research workflows. They are not promises of accuracy, calls to action, or substitutes for licensed advice.

01Educational explainers over prediction theater
02AI-assisted drafting with clear limitations
03Preference for user clarity over keyword stuffing

How public pages are written

Public pages are designed as orientation pages. They summarize the main narratives, describe what to watch, and explain why an asset attracts research demand. They should help a visitor understand the setup before opening a live read.

How AI is used

AI is used to help structure summaries and speed up draft generation, but that does not remove the need for judgment. If a sentence sounds confident but lacks evidence, the right move is to inspect the cited sources and treat the page as a starting point, not an endpoint.

What BullScore avoids

BullScore should avoid fake urgency, unearned claims of certainty, and copy that exists mainly to chase rankings. The goal is to make pages more useful for investors, not just more indexable for search engines.

Corrections and contact

If a page is unclear, misleading, or factually stale, the right response is to update or clarify it. For questions or corrections, use the support address listed on the site.

Read the methodology, then inspect the live workflow

The more clearly a user understands the framework and limits, the more useful BullScore becomes.