Fact-Checking Policy

Accuracy matters. Like, really matters. When you’re spending ₹20,000 on a phone or ₹10 lakhs on a car, you need information you can trust. Here’s how we make sure our facts are actually facts.

Our Accuracy Promise

We triple-check everything that matters: specs, prices, features, performance claims. If we’re not sure about something, we either verify it or don’t publish it.

How We Check Facts

Step 1: Go to the Source We start with official manufacturer websites, press releases, and spec sheets. Not some random blog or forum post – the actual source.

Step 2: Test It Ourselves Claims about battery life? We use the phone until it dies. Promises about acceleration? We actually drive the car. Marketing fluff is easy to spot when you use products for real.

Step 3: Multiple People Review One person might miss something. Two or three probably won’t. Every article gets reviewed by multiple team members before going live.

Step 4: Compare Notes We check against other reputable publications. If everyone else says a phone has issue X but we didn’t notice it, we test again.

What Gets Fact-Checked

Everything important:

  • Processor models and speeds
  • Screen sizes, resolutions, and technologies
  • Camera specifications and real-world performance
  • Battery capacities and charging speeds
  • Engine specs and power outputs
  • Safety ratings and features
  • Launch prices and availability
  • Company claims and marketing promises

When We Get It Wrong

Nobody’s perfect. When we mess up:

  • We fix it immediately
  • We add a note explaining what was wrong
  • We don’t try to hide the mistake
  • We learn from it to avoid similar errors

Spotted an Error? Email us at corrections@nssschool.com with:

  • Link to the article
  • What’s wrong
  • What the correct information is (if you know)

We’ll investigate right away and fix verified errors within 24 hours.

How We Handle Rumors

The tech and auto worlds are full of leaks and rumors. When we cover them:

  • We clearly label them as rumors or speculation
  • We mention the source and how reliable they typically are
  • We avoid presenting unconfirmed information as fact
  • We update when official information becomes available

Facts vs. Opinions

Big difference:

  • Fact: “This phone has a 5000mAh battery” (We can verify this)
  • Opinion: “This phone has excellent battery life” (Based on our experience)

We’re careful to distinguish between the two. Our reviews contain both, but you’ll always know which is which.

Where We Get Information

Primary Sources (Most Reliable):

  • Official company announcements
  • Direct manufacturer communication
  • Our own hands-on testing
  • Official specification documents

Secondary Sources (Used Carefully):

  • Other established tech and auto publications
  • Industry analysts and research firms
  • Professional testing organizations
  • Academic research

What We Avoid:

  • Anonymous tips without verification
  • Social media rumors
  • Unreliable websites
  • Content farms

Staying Independent

Our fact-checking process doesn’t bend for:

  • Advertisers
  • Companies sending us review units
  • Affiliate partnerships
  • Any commercial pressure

If a company doesn’t like our factual findings, tough luck.

Keeping Content Current

Technology changes fast. We:

  • Update old articles when significant changes happen
  • Add notes when information becomes outdated
  • Revise recommendations as newer options emerge
  • Archive content that’s no longer relevant

Training Our Team

Everyone on our team:

  • Knows how to verify information properly
  • Understands the difference between facts and opinions
  • Takes accuracy seriously
  • Admits when they don’t know something

Questions About Our Process?

Email factcheck@nssschool.com – we’re happy to explain our verification process for any article.