Last updated: 2026-05-24
TechNubo publishes practical technology guides for readers who want clearer decisions about accounts, devices, backups, privacy settings, cloud storage, and everyday online safety.
This policy explains what readers can expect from our articles.
What We Publish
TechNubo focuses on guides that help readers:
- understand a setting or feature before changing it
- prepare for account recovery, backup, or device migration
- compare practical tradeoffs without hype
- identify common privacy, storage, and security mistakes
- find official documentation when a platform-specific answer matters
What A Useful Guide Should Include
A useful TechNubo guide should state the reader problem, identify the relevant platform or device, explain important tradeoffs, and separate facts from recommendations.
When a guide includes steps, it should make the starting point clear. Readers should know whether the article applies to Windows, iPhone, Android, Google, Apple, Microsoft, or another named product.
For comparisons, reviews, and technology explainers, we try to explain what the feature does in daily use, where it can help, where it can frustrate people, and what kind of reader should look more closely before changing devices, settings, subscriptions, or services.
We do not treat a product announcement, a spec sheet, or a single opinion as a complete answer. A stronger article should connect official details with practical context, limitations, reader safety, and the real decision the reader is trying to make.
Source Standards
Important claims should be traceable to reliable sources. For step-by-step instructions, we prefer official product documentation or hands-on verification. For safety topics, we prefer official help pages, public agencies, standards organizations, or other reputable sources.
Community posts, forums, comments, and reviews may help identify common questions, but they are not enough on their own for factual, safety, policy, or statistical claims.
Source Limits
Some technology questions do not have one permanent answer. Product screens, account rules, storage limits, privacy controls, and security defaults can change. When a topic is likely to change, we try to avoid wording that makes a temporary interface sound permanent.
If an official source is incomplete, we may add context from reputable publishers, public guidance, or hands-on checks. We should make the basis for the statement clear enough that readers can understand why the guide says what it says.
Article Review
Before an article is published or updated, editors check whether:
- the article answers a real reader question
- the platform, product, or version is clear when it matters
- instructions match the cited source or a documented hands-on check
- important limitations and tradeoffs are included
- headlines and summaries do not overpromise
- claims are not copied, invented, or unsupported
Corrections
If you find an error or outdated step, contact us with the article URL, the specific section, and any source or detail that helps verify the issue.
When a correction is confirmed, we aim to update the article clearly. If the correction changes the meaning of a recommendation, we may add context so readers can understand what changed.
Updates
Technology changes quickly. We may update articles when product interfaces, official documentation, privacy settings, security guidance, scam patterns, storage rules, or account recovery behavior changes.
Older articles may remain useful, but readers should check dates, product names, and linked official sources before making important account, device, or backup decisions.
Reader Safety
Guides should not ask readers to share passwords, recovery codes, private keys, payment details, government ID numbers, or private account information with TechNubo.
When a guide involves account access, backup, privacy, or security, we try to include reminders about recovery options, current backups, and official account support channels where appropriate.
Advertising Independence
Advertising, sponsorship, or affiliate relationships should not decide whether a claim is true, whether a source is valid, or whether a guide is useful.
If sponsored or affiliate links are used in the future, they should be disclosed where appropriate.
Commercial relationships should not change the standard for accuracy, source quality, safety warnings, or correction handling. Readers should be able to tell the difference between editorial guidance and any paid relationship if that type of relationship is introduced later.
What We Avoid
TechNubo does not intentionally publish copied articles, misleading headlines, unsupported statistics, fake citations, hidden sponsorship, or instructions that depend on sharing passwords, recovery codes, or other sensitive credentials.
We also avoid pretending that one setting is right for every reader when the better choice depends on the device, account, risk, or backup situation.