Using Ounie
Asking
Every answer comes from your sources and links back to them. No outside knowledge, no invention — just what is in your brain, cited.
How an answer is built#
When you ask, Ounie searches your brain for the most relevant pages, expands to the pages they link to, and gathers that material into the context for the answer. The model then writes a response using only that context, citing each page it draws from. You can open any citation to read the source behind a claim.
Citations#
Citations point to wiki pages, not vague references. They resolve against the exact pages retrieved for your question, so a citation always leads somewhere real — if the model names a page that was not retrieved, it is dropped rather than shown. That is what lets you trust an answer enough to act on it.
Thin answers#
If your brain does not contain what a question needs, Ounie tells you plainly instead of guessing. A thin answer is a feature, not a failure: it means the system would rather admit a gap than fill it with something that is not in your sources. Add the missing material and ask again.
Correcting an answer#
When an answer is off, you can fix the page it came from, or save a correction that future answers will draw on. Over time your brain learns your wording and gets more useful, while every answer stays traceable to a source.
Daily limits#
Each plan includes a number of questions per day. See pricing for current limits. Asking over the REST API or a connector counts against the same daily allowance. Daily questions are separate from your credit wallet.