Editorial standards
Last updated: May 30, 2026
Reelsavor publishes practical, plain-language guides and free browser-based tools for people working with videos they own or have permission to use. These standards explain how our content is created, checked, and maintained so you can trust what you read here.
How our guides are researched
Every guide starts from the real tasks creators face: resizing a clip for a vertical feed, shrinking a file so it will send, choosing a format, or cropping to the right shape. We base our recommendations on widely documented platform specifications, established video and codec fundamentals, and hands-on testing of the workflows we describe. Where platform specifications change over time, we describe the durable principle and note that exact limits can change.
How content is reviewed
Drafts are reviewed by the Reelsavor Editorial Team for accuracy, clarity, and safety before publishing. Review includes checking that steps actually work, that examples are realistic, that claims are supported, and that nothing encourages misuse of other people's content. Guides carry a published date and, where relevant, a last updated date.
How we test tool recommendations
Our tools run entirely in your browser. Before recommending a workflow with one of them, we test the core path, selecting a file, processing it, validating the output, and confirming the exported file plays. We are explicit about browser support: in-browser video export commonly produces WebM, and we never label an exported file as MP4 unless the browser genuinely produced MP4.
How we keep language copyright-safe
We deliberately avoid framing our content around downloading private content, removing other people's watermarks, or working around platform protections. Our consistent position is that you should only process videos you own or have explicit permission to use, and that public visibility does not remove copyright. This is reflected in our Terms of Use, DMCA policy, and Disclaimer.
How update dates are managed
When we make a substantive change to a guide, updated steps, corrected information, or new recommendations, we refresh its last updated date. Minor copy fixes may not change the date. The goal is that the update date reflects meaningful changes you can rely on.
How to request a correction
If you spot an error, an outdated step, or anything unclear, we want to know. Email achyuthkumar64@gmail.com with the page title and what should be changed, and we will review it. Corrections to factual errors are prioritized. For copyright concerns, see our DMCA page.