Before Sharing a U.S. AOS 'Policy Bomb' Claim:
How Students Should Check Official Sources
網傳美國 AOS「政策核彈」前,留學生應先核對哪些官方來源
A viral claim about Adjustment of Status should not be published as confirmed policy unless it can be traced to USCIS, the Federal Register, the State Department or a qualified immigration-law source.
A viral claim about Adjustment of Status should not be published as confirmed policy unless it can be traced to USCIS, the Federal Register, the State Department or a qualified immigration-law source.
Treat major immigration claims as unverified until sourced
A claim that a core U.S. immigration process has been fundamentally changed should not be repeated as fact merely because it is urgent, dramatic or widely forwarded.
For Adjustment of Status, start with USCIS pages, the USCIS Policy Manual, the Federal Register, the Department of State where consular processing is involved, and qualified immigration-law analysis.
What students should do
Students and workers should avoid changing travel plans, filing strategy or employment timing based only on social-media posts. Save the post, identify the claimed agency action, and look for a dated official document.
If a case is already pending or close to filing, the responsible attorney or qualified adviser should review the specific facts.
For publication, the safe article is a fact-check and source guide, not a breaking-news alarm. If the official position later changes, the article can be updated with the exact date, document title and official link.
This is general information only and is not legal advice.