A human-readable map of the site — grouped by reader intent, not alphabetically, so you can find what you actually need faster.
This page exists for the moments when you know roughly what you're looking for but not the exact title or URL. It's organized into five groups based on reader intent, with a short description under every link so you can tell at a glance whether it's the page you need.
This HTML page is designed for people browsing directly — readable descriptions, grouped by intent. Our XML sitemap at /sitemap.xml serves the equivalent structural purpose for search engine crawlers and isn't meant for direct reading; the two work together rather than duplicating the same job.
If this is your first visit, the complete orientation guide is the single most useful starting point. If you're evaluating a specific platform's trustworthiness, jump straight to the Trust & Safety group above.
This HTML page is a human-readable index designed for visitors to browse; our XML sitemap at /sitemap.xml serves the same structural purpose for search engine crawlers and isn't meant for direct reading.
Yes — we update this page whenever a new page is added or restructured, alongside our automatically generated XML sitemap.
We grouped pages by reader intent (orientation, safety, reference, community, legal) rather than alphabetically, since most visitors are looking for a category of information, not a specific title.
Yes — this is a useful fallback if you're not sure of the exact terminology to search for but know roughly which category of content you want.
Every primary content page is listed here. Auxiliary technical files (like the XML sitemap or robots.txt) aren't included since they're not designed for human browsing.
Our News & Updates page provides a dated, chronological view of substantive content changes, which is a closer fit for that use case than this categorical index.
An alphabetical list is easy to build but hard to browse with intent — grouping by category (trust, reference, community, legal) mirrors how most readers actually think about what they're looking for.
No — only published, live pages appear here. Anything still being drafted isn't linked until it's actually available to read.
Yes — some readers use this page instead of the homepage specifically because it surfaces the full breadth of the site in one scannable view.
The footer covers the same links in a compact form for quick access from anywhere on the site; this page adds a short description under each link for more context.
We keep this index current as the site grows — if you ever land here looking for something that isn't listed, that's useful feedback for us, and the Contact page is the fastest way to let us know.