Source Tiers and Source Types
Before You Run labels information so readers can judge confidence and follow original source URLs.
Primary
Direct materials from the affected project or vendor, such as official advisories and release notes.
Confidence expectation: highest, when scope and date are explicit.
Reference
Reliable third-party summaries that provide context or interpretation.
Confidence expectation: useful but should be checked against primary sources.
Signal
Early indicators like community reports that may be incomplete.
Confidence expectation: low to medium until confirmation appears.
Signals are not treated as confirmed facts.
Candidate collection sources
Before You Run uses these sources for operator-controlled candidate collection. Collection does not mean automatic publication; every candidate is reviewed before it becomes a card.
Primary / official project sources
Reference / ecosystem sources
Other signals
Community posts, SNS links, screenshots, and manually provided URLs may be used as supporting signals, but they are not treated as confirmed facts by themselves.
Why source URLs matter
URLs let readers verify claims, timestamps, and update history directly.
- Freshness
- How recently the source was updated compared with the reported event.
- Severity
- How serious the potential impact is if the report is accurate.
- Confidence
- How strongly current evidence supports the claim.
Before You Run summarizes public information for defensive educational purposes.