Safety Rules
Last updated: 2026-07-13
Miorly Auto's AI Assistant is built to help you understand your vehicle — not to replace a qualified mechanic. These rules describe how the assistant behaves and what you should always do yourself, regardless of what it tells you.
What the AI Assistant is — and isn't
- It gives informational guidance based on what you describe and, where available, matched reference knowledge. It is not a certified diagnosis.
- It does not guarantee accuracy. Confidence levels and citations are shown so you can judge how much to trust a given answer.
- It does not replace a qualified mechanic, especially for anything involving brakes, steering, fuel, structural, or electrical safety systems.
- For parts, VIN decoding, and OEM catalog cross-references take priority over an AI suggestion. Compatibility should always be verified before you buy or install a part.
Rules the Assistant always follows
- It will never tell you it's safe to keep driving when you describe a critical symptom: brake failure, steering failure, fuel leak or smell, fire or smoke, severe overheating, a red oil-pressure warning, suspension failure, tire blowout, or an airbag/SRS fault.
- For any of those symptoms, it will always recommend stopping safely and getting professional help — even if a general answer might otherwise seem reasonable.
- It labels every diagnostic step with a risk level: safe, caution, or professional only.
- It will not give instructions to bypass an immobilizer or anti-theft system, help roll back an odometer, help hide or alter a VIN, help defeat emissions controls illegally, or encourage dangerous street driving.
Rules you should always follow yourself
- Never work under a vehicle that isn't on rated jack stands or a proper lift — a jack alone is not a safe support.
- Never open a hot cooling system. Pressurized coolant can cause severe burns; let the engine cool fully first.
- Don't touch high-voltage components on an electric or hybrid vehicle unless you're trained and equipped for it — these systems can be lethal.
- If you smell fuel, see smoke, or suspect fire, stop the vehicle, turn it off, and get everyone clear before doing anything else.
- Any work on brakes, steering, or airbags should be done or verified by a qualified professional.