Editorial methodology
Last updated: July 2026
This page explains how content on the Scanvey blog is produced, structured, and checked — so you know what you're reading before you rely on it.
Who produces this content
The Scanvey blog is published by LSN Consulting, the company behind the Scanvey application. Articles are published under the "Scanvey" name, with no individual author byline: they reflect the work of the product team rather than the opinion of any single analyst or trader.
What this blog covers
The blog covers technical analysis applied to forex and crypto exclusively: moving averages, RSI, MACD, Ichimoku, multi-timeframe analysis, and scanning methods. This is educational content — it explains concepts and methods, not buy or sell recommendations on any specific asset.
How content is organized
Articles are grouped into six topic clusters (multi-timeframe analysis, forex scanning, indicator-specific scanners, indicator combinations, crypto scanning, and tools and alternatives). Each cluster is built around one or more reference articles, supported by more specific articles that go deeper into a subtopic. This structure is meant to make navigation easier, not to multiply pages covering the same ground.
How we check accuracy
Every claim about what Scanvey actually does — which pairs it tracks, which indicators it calculates, which timeframes are available — is verified directly against the product's code before publication, to avoid any gap between what an article describes and what the tool actually does. General explanations of technical indicators draw on recognised public sources in the industry (Investopedia, BabyPips, DailyFX, TradingView, CoinMarketCap), cited at the end of each article in the "Further reading" section.
How content gets updated
An article's last-updated date changes when a substantive change is made to its content: added or rewritten paragraphs, a new section, or a structural change. Minor edits — typo fixes, SEO length adjustments, link updates — do not trigger an update to that date, so it stays a reliable signal of how recently the content actually changed.
What this content is not
No article on the Scanvey blog constitutes investment advice, a trading signal, or a buy or sell recommendation. Scanvey is not a regulated investment advisory service. Every article includes a reminder of this — the full disclaimer is in our legal notice.
Reporting an error
Spotted an inaccuracy, a broken link, or outdated information? Email us at contact@scanvey.com — we correct reported errors as quickly as we can.