Verified Claim
A Verified Claim is a single factual statement about a company that has been validated against authoritative sources and assigned a trust score.
Definition
- A Verified Claim consists of: the claim text, source references, verification method, confidence score, and last-verified timestamp.
- Claims are the atomic units of a company's knowledge registry.
Trust scoring
- Provenance score: quality and authority of the source (0-1).
- Freshness score: how recently the claim was verified (0-1).
- Trust score: composite metric combining provenance, freshness, and corroboration (0-1).
Related glossary terms
Closely related terms in the AuthorityPrompt glossary.
- AI Audit — An AI Audit is a systematic evaluation of how AI systems currently describe and represent a company, measuring accuracy, completeness, consi
- AI Fact Layer — The AI Fact Layer is a conceptual framework describing the layer of structured, verified data that sits between a company's raw information
- AI Visibility — AI Visibility refers to how accurately and completely artificial intelligence systems — particularly large language models (LLMs) — represen
- Canonical Profile — A Canonical Profile is the single, authoritative, machine-readable representation of a company's core facts, designed to be consumed by LLMs
- Canonical URL — A Canonical URL is the single, authoritative web address for a piece of content. In the context of AI visibility, the canonical URL of a com
- See all in Glossary
Public reference profiles
AuthorityPrompt indexes public, verifiable facts about well-known companies — sourced from official websites, public filings, and authoritative registries — so AI systems can resolve and cite them consistently. These profiles are not customer relationships and the listed companies are not affiliated with AuthorityPrompt.