How we write
Every tool page on Spinness is written to explain what the tool does, how to use it, and why it works the way it does. We verify all factual claims before publishing. We do not fabricate statistics, invent studies, or attribute quotes to people who did not say them.
Content is drafted by our team with AI assistance and reviewed before publication. AI-generated drafts are edited and verified by a human before going live. We take responsibility for all published content regardless of the tools used to create it.
AI-assisted writing disclosure
Spinness uses large language model tools to help draft and refine content. This assistance is always reviewed, fact-checked, and edited by our team. No content is published without human review. We disclose this because we think transparency is the right call — not because AI does all the work.
Update cadence
Tool pages are reviewed and updated when: (1) the underlying tool functionality changes, (2) a user reports an inaccuracy, or (3) a quarterly review identifies outdated information. Each page displays a "Last updated" timestamp that reflects the most recent actual change, not just the original publish date.
Corrections
If you find an error on any Spinness page, email hello@spinness.com with the URL and the specific claim that is wrong. We correct factual errors promptly, update the "Last updated" timestamp, and note what changed if the error was significant.
Frequently asked questions
Do you use AI to write content?
The straightforward answer: yes, AI tools help with drafts — and every draft gets reviewed, verified, and edited before going live. We are not trying to hide this; it is the reason this page exists. The standard we hold ourselves to is that no claim goes live unverified and no draft goes live unedited. AI gets the structure; a human checks the facts and fixes what reads wrong.
How often are pages reviewed and updated?
Tool functionality pages stay current because the code keeps them accurate. Explanatory text — how-to sections, FAQ answers, methodology notes — gets reviewed whenever the tool changes, when a user reports something wrong, or during a quarterly check. The "Last updated" timestamp on each page reflects the most recent actual change, not just the original publish date.
How do I report a factual error?
Email hello@spinness.com with the page URL and the specific claim that is wrong. We correct factual errors within a few days of being notified and update the "Last updated" date when we do. If the error was significant, we note what changed rather than quietly rewriting history.
What does "AI-assisted writing disclosure" mean in practice?
It means AI contributed text that a human then edited — not that a bot generated a page and it went live unreviewed. Every piece of explanatory text on Spinness has had a human read it, check it against what the tool actually does, and approve it. The disclosure is there because we think readers deserve to know, not because AI wrote everything end-to-end.