AI Use Disclosure

How AI is used in the editorial process at Smart Ring HQ — and what remains a human responsibility.

AI tools assist with parts of the editorial workflow at Smart Ring HQ. This disclosure explains what AI is and is not used for, so readers can decide how to weigh the content.

What AI is used for

  • Research synthesis. Reading and summarising published manufacturer documentation, regulatory filings, peer-reviewed accuracy studies, and other primary sources. AI summaries are verified against the underlying source before any factual claim is made on the site.
  • Drafting. Producing first drafts of comparison sections, FAQ entries, and explanatory passages — always against a research brief and an evaluation framework set by the editor.
  • Editing. Tightening prose, checking consistency, suggesting clearer structure.

What AI is not used for

  • Fabricating first-person experience. AI is not asked to write "we tested" or "we wore" passages where no such testing occurred. Where this site does not have direct hands-on experience with a ring, it says so.
  • Inventing data. AI is not asked to invent prices, specifications, ratings, customer counts, revenue figures, or other quantitative claims. Every number on the site has a citable source.
  • Generating fake testimonials or quotes. AI is never used to fabricate quotes from readers, customers, or named third parties.
  • Replacing the editor. Every published article is reviewed by a human editor for factual accuracy, tone, and policy compliance before publication.

Verification

Where accuracy matters most — product specifications, prices, subscription terms, study findings, regulatory status — claims are checked against primary sources and dated. If you spot a factual error, please flag it via the editorial policy page and we will correct it promptly.