Editorial Policy
Bitcoin education has a weird job.
It has to explain a technical system, a financial asset, a security practice, and a set of human mistakes, often to someone who arrived with one innocent question: "How do I buy this without messing it up?"
That is a lot to pack into one beginner guide.
This editorial policy explains how SatoABC tries to do that responsibly.
Our Editorial Goal
SatoABC publishes educational content for Bitcoin beginners.
Our goal is to make complicated topics understandable without making them look simpler than they really are.
That means we try to:
- Explain Bitcoin concepts in plain English.
- Separate facts from assumptions.
- Show risks and limitations clearly.
- Avoid hype, price predictions, and pressure.
- Help readers verify important details before taking action.
- Link related beginner guides together so readers can move through the topic in a logical order.
How We Choose Topics
We choose topics based on beginner search demand, real user questions, site structure, and practical risk.
A topic is more likely to be covered when it helps a reader understand one of these areas:
- How Bitcoin works.
- How people usually buy Bitcoin.
- How wallets and storage work.
- How sending, selling, withdrawing, and cashing out differ.
- How fees, confirmations, private keys, seed phrases, and scams affect beginners.
- Which common mistakes should be avoided before money is involved.
We avoid topics that do not fit the SatoABC mission, including hype-driven token coverage, meme coin promotion, short-term price predictions, and instructions designed to bypass legal or platform requirements.
Research and Sources
When writing or updating guides, we may consult:
- Official Bitcoin educational resources.
- Wallet and exchange help centers.
- Public regulatory or consumer protection resources.
- Product documentation.
- Reputable educational explainers.
- User questions that reveal common beginner confusion.
For platform-specific details, such as fees, verification, limits, or interface steps, official documentation should be treated as the primary source because those details can change.
How We Write
Our writing standard is beginner-first.
That means:
- Define the terms before using them heavily.
- Give the short answer before the caveats.
- Use examples, checklists, comparisons, and step-by-step explanations.
- Avoid pretending that one wallet, app, exchange, or method is always best for everyone.
- Explain what the reader should verify before acting.
If a subject has risk, we say so.
Not with dramatic thundercloud music. Just plainly. A lost seed phrase is serious. A wrong address matters. A fake support message matters. A platform withdrawal limit matters. The boring details are where many beginner mistakes live.
Independence and Commercial Relationships
SatoABC is an educational website.
If we use advertising, sponsorships, affiliate links, or other commercial relationships, those relationships should be disclosed where appropriate.
Commercial relationships should not determine our basic educational conclusions. If something has a risk, limitation, fee, or important tradeoff, we should say so even if the topic is commercially attractive.
Risk and Sensitive Topics
Some search terms carry extra risk.
Examples include:
- "best place to buy Bitcoin"
- "best Bitcoin wallet"
- "buy Bitcoin no KYC"
- "buy Bitcoin anonymously"
- "cash out Bitcoin"
- "private key"
- "seed phrase"
For these topics, SatoABC uses a risk-aware approach:
- best topics are handled as selection criteria, not absolute rankings.
- anonymous and no KYC topics are handled as privacy, risk, scam, and compliance education, not evasion tutorials.
- cash out topics include fees, limits, records, tax awareness, and scam warnings.
- Private key and seed phrase topics emphasize safety, not collection, recovery promises, or unsafe examples.
Review and Updates
Bitcoin tools, fees, regulations, wallet features, and platform rules can change.
We may update pages when:
- A factual error is found.
- A platform changes relevant rules or features.
- A guide becomes unclear or incomplete.
- A new beginner question deserves coverage.
- A source becomes outdated.
For fast-changing details, readers should always verify with official sources before acting.
Corrections
If you find something that appears wrong, outdated, unclear, or incomplete, contact us at corrections@satoabc.com.
Please include the page URL, the section in question, and the reason you believe it should be changed.
We review correction requests and may update content when appropriate.