Plain language, where possible.
Imprint, privacy, cookies, terms, and accessibility. We've written this in the clearest English we could manage. If anything here is unclear or seems wrong, write to info@citetur.org and we'll fix it.
Colofon.
Citetur is Latin for let it be cited — and the work this studio sells is, at root, citation. So this is our citation: who we are, what we run on, what we owe, and where to find us.
Registration
- Trade name
- Citetur
- Legal entity
- Grimoire Digital
- Legal form
- Eenmanszaak (sole proprietorship)
- KvK
- 42039793
- BTW-id
- Vestiging
- Amsterdam, Nederland
- info@citetur.org
People
Citetur is run by two people. Their full bios live in the studio section of the homepage; here is the legal-and-roles version:
- Eigenaar
- Hichem Touati — owns Grimoire Digital, runs the SEO and engineering side. Software engineer and poet. Created The Unsafe Journal.
- Editor
- Sina Khani — Wikipedia editor for over a decade, with paid-contributor disclosure publicly on file. Editor at The Unsafe Journal. Collaborates with Citetur as an independent contributor on Wikipedia work.
Adjacent institutions
The Unsafe Journal (founded 10 February 2026) is the digital publication of The Unsafe House, an Amsterdam art collective that describes itself as "a safe space for unsafe ideas." Both run independently of Citetur and have their own legal and editorial structures, but they share two of Citetur's people. We name them here because they're part of the institutional context this studio emerged from — and because some clients arrive via that scene.
Code and design
This site is hand-written HTML and CSS by Hichem Touati. There is no build pipeline, no JavaScript framework, no CMS, no analytics, and no third-party scripts beyond the typeface request. The decision to write the site by hand rather than via a templating system reflects the work this studio sells: structural correctness over volume.
Typography
- Display
- Fraunces (italic) — by Phaeton Type / Stephen Nixon and Tobias Frere-Jones, 2020–.
- Body
- Inter Tight — by Rasmus Andersson, derived from the Inter family.
- Mono
- JetBrains Mono — by Philipp Nurullin, JetBrains.
- Served via
- Bunny Fonts — a privacy-respecting Google Fonts mirror, GDPR-compliant by design.
Hosting
This site is hosted by Junda Webhosting. The host receives standard server-log data — IP addresses, timestamps, request URLs — for operational and security purposes, and retains them per its own retention policy. The host runs no scripts on our behalf and cannot read or write to visitor devices through our site. See the privacy section for what this means in practice.
Copyright
Content on this site is © 2026 Grimoire Digital, except where otherwise noted. The brand name Citetur, the typographic lockup, the visual system, and the editorial copy are not licensed for reuse without written permission. The underlying HTML and CSS techniques are conventional and unowned. Where we cite Wikipedia policy pages or other public sources, those remain under their original licences.
Errata
If you find a factual error on this site — an outdated KvK detail, a broken link, a typo, a wrong attribution — write to info@citetur.org. We correct things and we date the correction here. So far: none recorded.
Anno MMXXVI · last updated 25 April 2026
Privacy.
This page describes what personal data Citetur (Grimoire Digital) collects, why, how long we keep it, who has access to it, and what your rights are under the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR / AVG). The short version: we collect almost nothing.
What we collect
When you write to info@citetur.org, your email arrives in our inbox like any other email. We retain emails as long as they are operationally relevant — typically until a project completes, plus seven years (Dutch tax law requires retaining business correspondence for that period).
The contact form on our home page does not send data to a server we control. It opens your email client with a pre-composed message, which you then send from your own mailbox. We never touch the data until it arrives in our inbox as a regular email — at which point the email-correspondence policy above applies.
Whatever hosting provider serves citetur.org keeps standard server logs (IP addresses, timestamps, requested URLs). These are typically retained for 30 days and used for security and operational purposes only.
What we don't collect
- No analytics scripts (no Google Analytics, no Plausible, no Fathom, no anything).
- No advertising trackers.
- No cookies. See the cookies section.
- No fingerprinting.
- No third-party embeds that load scripts.
- No data sold, rented, or shared with third parties.
Your rights under GDPR / AVG
You have the right to:
- Access the personal data we hold about you
- Have it corrected if it is inaccurate
- Have it deleted (the right to erasure)
- Have it transferred to you in a machine-readable format (data portability)
- Object to or restrict our processing of it
- Withdraw consent at any time
To exercise any of these rights, write to info@citetur.org. We respond within 30 days, typically much sooner.
Complaints
If you believe we are handling your data improperly and we cannot resolve it together, you have the right to file a complaint with the Dutch Data Protection Authority: Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens.
Sensitive projects
If a project involves particularly sensitive personal information — e.g., a Wikipedia article that touches private medical, legal, or family matters — we move communication to Signal or PGP after the first message. We do not store sensitive correspondence in plain email longer than necessary.
Last updated: 25 April 2026
Terms.
These terms govern professional services provided by Citetur (Grimoire Digital, KvK 42039793, Amsterdam) to clients who engage us for Wikipedia article writing or entity SEO work. They apply to every engagement unless we agree otherwise in writing.
1. Engagement
Every project starts with a free audit. We assess whether the work is feasible, ethical, and within our scope. If we conclude that we cannot do the work well — for example, if we do not believe a client meets Wikipedia notability criteria — we say so plainly and recommend against the engagement. The audit creates no obligation on either side.
2. Scope and quote
After the audit, we send a written quote covering scope, timeline, and fee. The quote is valid for 30 days. The quote is not binding until both parties sign or confirm by email.
3. Fees and payment
Wikipedia work is project-basis, from €400 (incl. BTW). Entity SEO is project-basis, from €600 (incl. BTW). Larger or longer engagements are quoted individually.
Payment terms unless otherwise agreed:
- 50% of the project fee on engagement (when work begins)
- 50% on completion
Invoices are payable within 14 days of issue.
4. Wikipedia: what we will and won't do
We follow Wikipedia's Conflict of Interest (WP:COI) and Paid-Contribution Disclosure (WP:PAID) policies. This means in practice:
- We disclose paid editing on our Wikipedia editor user pages and on the talk page of every article we work on.
- We do not edit articles directly on behalf of clients. We submit drafts via Articles for Creation (AfC) or post {{edit COI request}} on talk pages, which the volunteer community then evaluates.
- We cannot guarantee that an article will be accepted, kept, or that any particular version will stand. We can only do work that is consistent with Wikipedia's policies; the community decides what stays. Anyone who tells you they can guarantee a Wikipedia article is misleading you.
- We refuse work that requires undisclosed editing, sock puppetry, or any practice that violates Wikipedia's terms of service.
5. SEO: what we will and won't do
We do "white-hat" entity SEO — structured data, Wikidata entity work, schema implementation, factual correctness across the visible web. We do not buy links. We do not run link farms or PBNs. We do not do reputation suppression, defamation removal, or "negative SEO" against competitors. We cannot guarantee specific search rankings or Knowledge Panel appearance, because Google explicitly does not allow anyone to guarantee that.
6. Intellectual property
Work product (Wikipedia drafts, Wikidata edits, structured-data implementations, written content delivered for the client's site) belongs to the client upon full payment. Citetur retains the right to:
- Disclose the engagement publicly per Wikipedia's WP:PAID requirements.
- Reference the engagement in anonymized form ("Berlin-based visual artist," "Amsterdam gallery") in our portfolio and case-study materials, unless the client requests otherwise in writing.
7. Confidentiality
We do not disclose client identities, internal communication, strategy details, or proprietary information except: (a) as required by Wikipedia disclosure rules; (b) when legally compelled; (c) when the client gives explicit written permission.
8. Limitation of liability
Citetur's total liability for any project is limited to the fees actually paid by the client for that project. We are not liable for indirect or consequential damages, loss of profit, loss of reputation, or third-party actions (e.g., Wikipedia community decisions, Google algorithm changes, defamation by anonymous parties).
9. Termination
Either party may terminate an engagement in writing. If the client terminates after work has begun, fees for work completed up to the termination date remain payable. If Citetur terminates because the client misrepresented facts, concealed a conflict of interest, or otherwise breached these terms, fees already paid are non-refundable.
10. Governing law and dispute resolution
These terms are governed by Dutch law. Any disputes are subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the courts of Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
11. Changes to these terms
If we update these terms, the version that applies to a given engagement is the version that was posted at the time the engagement was agreed. We do not retroactively change the terms of work already in progress.
Last updated: 25 April 2026
Accessibility.
Citetur aims for WCAG 2.1 AA conformance across this website. Accessibility is part of our craft: a site that excludes a disabled visitor is, in our view, a broken site.
What we've done
- Semantic HTML — proper headings, landmarks (nav, main, footer), lists, and form labels throughout.
- Keyboard navigation — every interactive element is reachable and operable via keyboard alone. The mobile drawer is closeable with Escape.
- Color contrast — body text meets WCAG AA contrast ratios; the warm-paper / dark-ink palette has been checked against the contrast guidelines.
- Text resizing — content remains readable at up to 200% browser zoom without loss of functionality.
- Focus indicators — visible focus outlines on every interactive element, with sufficient contrast.
- Reduced motion — the site respects the prefers-reduced-motion media query; smooth-scroll and transitions are disabled when the user has requested reduced motion.
- Skip link — a "skip to main content" link is the first focusable element on every page, for keyboard and screen-reader users.
- Language declaration — every document specifies its language at the html element, so screen readers pronounce content correctly.
- No autoplay or hostile motion — no autoplaying video, no sudden animations.
What we haven't done yet
- Independent third-party audit. The site has been hand-built with accessibility in mind but has not been audited by a certified accessibility specialist. If you find an issue, please tell us — see "report a problem" below.
- Plain-Dutch alternatives. A summary of services in plain Dutch is on our roadmap.
- Sign-language summary. A future addition once the journal launches.
Report a problem
Email info@citetur.org with the URL and a description of the accessibility problem. We aim to acknowledge within two business days and to fix material issues within fourteen days. If a fix takes longer (e.g., a structural change) we will tell you when we expect it to ship.
Standards
This statement is made in accordance with the European Accessibility Act (EAA, Directive (EU) 2019/882), which takes effect 28 June 2025 and applies to many private-sector services in the EU.
Last updated: 25 April 2026