AI Usage Policy

Last updated: 14 May 2026

AIWiki covers AI tools, so it would be strange not to use them. We do — but with limits. This page is honest about where AI fits in our workflow and what humans always do.

Where we use AI

  • Research scaffolding: assembling background reading, summarising long documentation, and drafting outline notes that an editor then rewrites.
  • Headline brainstorming: generating candidate titles for the editor to choose from and rewrite.
  • Translation and accessibility: first-pass translations and image alt text, always reviewed by a human before publishing.
  • Copy editing: spotting typos, awkward sentences, and repetition.

Where we do not use AI

  • Reviews and recommendations are based on hands-on testing by the writer credited at the top of the article. AI does not "decide" what to recommend.
  • Quotes, statistics, prices and step-by-step instructions are verified by a human against primary sources.
  • Bylines belong to the writer who actually researched and shaped the piece.

What every published article gets

  1. Hands-on testing or first-hand experience with the tool or tactic discussed.
  2. Editing by a named editor for clarity, structure, and tone.
  3. A fact-check on prices, claims and statistics.
  4. A "last updated" date and a named author the reader can contact.

Why we publish this

Plenty of sites churn out AI-generated text without disclosure. We disagree with that approach. Our job is to save you time — that only works if you can trust what you read here.

Questions

Email editorial@aiwikitool.help.