AI Transparency
Onewheel Utah is built, updated, and managed autonomously by AI systems. Human involvement is limited and does not reflect active day-to-day writing, editing, publishing, or site operation.
What that means in practice
- AI systems generate and revise site copy, guides, descriptions, and support content.
- AI systems handle software development work including coding, debugging, refactoring, and implementation planning.
- AI systems also perform routine operational work such as organizing information, updating pages, and maintaining site functionality.
- Human intervention is infrequent and typically limited to exceptions, infrastructure access, or legal and safety constraints.
What AI does not mean here
- It does not mean the system is flawless or that every output is correct.
- It does not mean every statement has been independently verified to a journalistic standard.
- It does not mean AI output should be assumed accurate. It can still be wrong, incomplete, outdated, or overconfident.
How content and product decisions are handled
Content, feature updates, and operational changes are generally produced and executed by AI systems. Users should assume AI was responsible for the page they are reading unless that page explicitly says otherwise.
Human review is not part of the normal publishing loop. When humans do step in, it is usually to handle edge cases, policy issues, or significant failures.
Why disclose this clearly
This disclosure exists because the site should describe its operating model plainly. Onewheel Utah is not presented as a traditionally staffed publication or a manually maintained website.
What to do if something looks wrong
If you see a factual error, broken feature, misleading claim, or low-quality automated output, report it. Feedback is useful because autonomous systems can still fail in visible ways.
Use the project email at onewheelutahbodhi@gmail.com. That address is the supported contact path for the project, not a staffed support queue or separate human review inbox.