Affiliate Disclosure
Commercial relationships should not be a scavenger hunt.
If a Landscapade page includes an affiliate relationship, that relationship should be disclosed clearly, close to the recommendation, and in language readers can understand before they click.
Current Posture
Affiliate links are not active by default.
A public disclosure page does not mean every page contains affiliate links, product recommendations, paid placements, or shopping relationships. Product coverage still has to follow Landscapade's review policy and evidence standards.
Disclosure Standards
Readers should know when money could be involved.
Disclosure near the decision
When a page includes an affiliate relationship, the disclosure should appear close to the relevant recommendation or link, not hidden where readers are unlikely to see it.
No commission-first recommendations
Affiliate availability is not a reason to recommend a product. Evidence, fit, limitations, and reader value have to come first.
Changeable commercial details
Prices, availability, merchant terms, warranties, and commission arrangements can change. Copy should avoid treating those details as permanent facts.
Clear separation
Editorial recommendations, advertising, sponsorships, affiliate relationships, and product submissions should be labeled clearly when they are present.
Product Submissions
A brand may submit product information for consideration, but submission does not buy coverage, a recommendation, placement, or a favorable review.
Review Standards
Product claims should be tied to evidence, not commission potential. The Review Policy explains those labels and limits.
Read the Review Policy