Trust
Editorial Standards
How we publish — and how we fix it when we get something wrong.
Our role
Atelier is an editorial network: five publications, one infrastructure, distinct voices. We publish explainers, guides, and long-form journalism intended to help readers understand places, design, images, policy, and technology — not to replace professional advice where that applies (medical, legal, financial, or travel safety).
Accuracy and updates
Every article is reviewed for internal consistency, sourced claims where facts are time-sensitive, and clear distinction between reporting and opinion. We update articles when laws, products, or major events change material details. The publication date reflects when the piece first appeared; substantive revisions include an updated date in the article body when applicable.
Corrections
If you find a factual error, email hello@atelier.networkwith the article URL and the correction. We aim to acknowledge within five business days and publish corrections for verified errors — minor typos may be fixed silently; material errors are noted at the top or bottom of the article.
AI-assisted production
Some drafting and research workflows use AI tools under human editorial control. Editors are responsible for final text, structure, and whether a piece meets our standards before publication. We do not publish fully automated content without review.
Affiliates and independence
Unless explicitly labeled, articles do not contain paid placement. If we introduce affiliate links or sponsored content in the future, they will be disclosed clearly at the top of the relevant article. Editorial coverage is not sold to advertisers.
Sensitive topics (YMYL)
Health, finance, legal, and news-related explainers receive additional scrutiny. They are written for general education, not as personalized advice. Consult qualified professionals for decisions that affect your health, money, or legal status.
Images
Hero and listing images are sourced from Unsplash (or placeholders during development) with photographer attribution on article pages. Images illustrate topics; they are not always literal depictions of every place or product mentioned in the text.