Trust and Provenance Glossary

Trust Signal

Any public clue that helps a system assess whether a page, site, or listing is credible, current, and coherent.

Trust signals are the public evidence layer behind whether a machine chooses to cite or ignore you.

Definition

A trust signal is any public clue that helps a system assess whether a site or asset is reliable enough to use.

In practice

Trust signals include timestamps, consistency across files and pages, topic focus, clear ownership, glossary alignment, and stable route structure.

Why it matters

Trust is accumulated through coherence. A site that stays internally consistent is easier to cite and less risky for a machine to rely on.