Last updated: July 13, 2026
This page explains how content on DevCases is produced, checked and corrected. We publish it because you deserve to know how what you are reading was made.
What we write about
We publish practical, evergreen articles about Software Development, Programming, System Design, Software Architecture, DevOps, Cybersecurity, Artificial Intelligence, Cloud Computing, Open Source, Developer Case Studies and Technical Tutorials. We aim to answer a real question completely, rather than pad an article out to hit a word count.
Our use of AI
We are open about this: articles on this site are drafted with the assistance of AI writing tools, then reviewed before they are published. We think transparency matters more than pretending otherwise.
Because AI systems can state things confidently and still be wrong, we run every draft through automated checks that look for:
- statistics, percentages and figures that cannot be sourced;
- references to studies, surveys or reports that may not exist;
- quotes attributed to real people;
- prices, dates and product specifications;
- links to external sources.
Anything flagged is removed, rewritten in qualitative terms, or held back for a human to verify. Our editorial preference is to say less rather than guess.
What this means for you as a reader: we deliberately avoid citing hard numbers we cannot stand behind. If you need a precise figure — a price, a statistic, a legal threshold — please verify it at the primary source.
Accuracy and corrections
If you find a mistake, tell us at dev@devcases.site. We will check it, and if you are right we will correct the article. We do not quietly delete errors; substantive corrections are noted on the page.
Independence
We do not accept payment in exchange for coverage or for a favourable opinion.
Not professional advice
Our content is general information, not professional advice. See the Disclaimer.