What it means

Research language can obscure the real claim being made.

When a page says research only while the surrounding marketing implies human benefit, the reader should separate chemistry, product quality, and legal use.

What it does not mean

It does not prove safety, identity, or legitimacy.

A research label does not replace FDA review, official labeling, clinical evidence, or batch-level confidence.

PeptideFactCheck rule

Source trail before certainty.

PeptideFactCheck profiles should show where the claim comes from: official labels, trials, PubMed, pharmacology databases, or just the internet.

Editorial boundary

What this page will not do

It will not provide dosing, cycling, sourcing, injection, or personal medical instructions. The job is to classify claims and explain mechanisms.