Fondsites is published by TensorSpace, Inc. and edited by JJ Ben-Joseph . This page explains how the material on this network is made, what standards it is held to, and what to do when something is wrong. It exists because readers deserve to know how a page came to be before they rely on it.
Who is responsible
Every guidebook on Fondsites has a named author, and the named author is the person accountable for the page. Fondsites does not use anonymous staff bylines. The publisher of record is TensorSpace, Inc., and the editor responsible for the network is JJ Ben-Joseph. If a page gives advice that turns out to be wrong, the responsibility sits with the byline and the publisher, not with a tool.
How guidebooks are written
Fondsites uses AI tools to assist with drafting, and a human editor reviews, revises, and approves every guidebook before it is published. In practice that means the structure, claims, examples, and recommendations on a page pass through human judgment: drafts are cut, corrected, reorganized, and rewritten rather than published as generated. AI assistance lets a small publisher cover a topic thoroughly; it does not decide what the page says.
The editorial standard is the same across every topic library: explain the decision, show the tradeoff, and avoid pretending a short guide can replace qualified help when the topic calls for it. Guides that touch safety, health, legal, or financial boundaries say so plainly and point readers toward qualified professionals.
How illustrations are made
Hero images and illustrations across Fondsites are AI-generated. They are editorial illustrations, not photographs: they exist to set the scene for a page, not to document a real product, place, or event. Images are never used as evidence for a claim in the text. Where a page’s image is AI-generated, the page discloses it.
Sources and accuracy
Guidebooks favor established, verifiable ground truth: official frameworks and standards bodies where they exist (for example NIST, CIS, and MITRE in the cybersecurity library), producer and regional conventions in food and drink topics, and manufacturer documentation for gear. Where a topic is contested or evolving, guides say what is uncertain rather than manufacturing confidence. We are adding visible source lists to guidebooks on an ongoing basis, prioritizing topics where a wrong claim carries real-world cost.
Updates and corrections
Dates on a page mean what they say. “Published” is when the page first went live; “Updated” appears only when the content has genuinely changed since. When a page is updated, the goal is not to pad word count or refresh a date for search engines — it is to make the advice more specific, more useful, and easier to verify.
Corrections are part of the job. If you find an error — a stale claim, a wrong number, a misleading recommendation, a broken safety boundary — write to us via the contact page . Corrections that survive a check are applied to the page, and material ones are noted in the text. We would rather fix a page than defend it.
Affiliate links and advertising
Some pages include Amazon affiliate links, and TensorSpace earns from qualifying purchases; this is disclosed alongside the links and in the footer of every page. Affiliate relationships never determine what a guide recommends — the recommendation logic in each buying guide is written first, and links are attached after. If advertising appears on Fondsites, it is served by third-party networks as described in the privacy policy , and advertisers have no input into editorial content.
What Fondsites will not do
No pages generated purely to capture a search phrase. No fake reviews of products we have not examined. No medical, legal, or financial advice dressed up as a guidebook. No undisclosed sponsorship. No date manipulation. If the network grows, it grows by adding libraries that meet this standard, not by lowering it.