Provenance disclosure
A provenance disclosure is a formal record explaining how a specific work was created, what role automation played, and who is taking responsibility for the final result.
It brings the main parts of that declaration together in one place: the subject, the signatory, the claims being made, the supporting context, the limitations, and the issuance details.
It is designed to be conservative. It records what the issuer is willing to state clearly, not what the service can independently verify.
Why this document exists
A provenance disclosure gives readers a structured way to understand the creation process without relying on scattered notes, informal disclaimers, or one-sentence statements that are easy to misread later.
What makes it different from a simple statement
A short statement may say that AI was used or that a human reviewed the final work. A provenance disclosure goes further by organizing the declaration into stable sections with claims, disclosures, limitations, and supporting context.
How to read it
Readers should treat the disclosure as a formal declaration by the issuer, not as a third-party finding. Its value is in clarity, structure, and record stability.