Definitions by CrowdCase
Casebase
A group of people online who are highly engaged, follow, discuss, participate, spend their free time researching, engaging and making with content that revolves around a single investigation or case.
The Jeffery Epstein casebase has been pushing out some crazy infodrops lately.
I'd like to thank all the casebasers who helped find the evidence we needed to find my daughter. Without their help, I honestly don't think she would be back at home right now.
I'd like to thank all the casebasers who helped find the evidence we needed to find my daughter. Without their help, I honestly don't think she would be back at home right now.
Truthlaxxing
Presenting oneself as honest, being authentic, or truth-seeking while keeping that honesty shallow and often used in a performative manner. It provides enough "transparency" to virtue signal, perform integrity, but not enough to actually make the person risk anything by saying it. The truth is there but it smooths over the parts that matter; only to protect image, avoid consequence, or solicit attention to themself. It's not lying. It's not ignorance. It's truth used as manipulation and attention seeking tactic.
Where you see it:
Social media confessionals that reveal just enough to seem vulnerable but never the part that would actually damage their reputation. Corporate apologies that acknowledge "mistakes were made" without specifying what, who, or why. Politicians who answer a different question than the one asked but do it confidently enough that most people don't notice. Influencers who build a brand on "authenticity" but only share struggles after they've already resolved them.
How to identify it:
The truth never costs them anything. That's the tell. Real honesty has friction. Hard truths makes you risk relationships, reputation, or comfort. Truthlaxxing produces none of that friction because the shallow version was carefully selected to be safe. Ask yourself: what would the full truth look like here, and did they get anywhere near it? If the answer is no, and they still got credit for being honest, that's the laxx.
Where you see it:
Social media confessionals that reveal just enough to seem vulnerable but never the part that would actually damage their reputation. Corporate apologies that acknowledge "mistakes were made" without specifying what, who, or why. Politicians who answer a different question than the one asked but do it confidently enough that most people don't notice. Influencers who build a brand on "authenticity" but only share struggles after they've already resolved them.
How to identify it:
The truth never costs them anything. That's the tell. Real honesty has friction. Hard truths makes you risk relationships, reputation, or comfort. Truthlaxxing produces none of that friction because the shallow version was carefully selected to be safe. Ask yourself: what would the full truth look like here, and did they get anywhere near it? If the answer is no, and they still got credit for being honest, that's the laxx.
"That apology letter was pure truthlaxxing."
"I can't take anything on the news seriously anymore. Everything they say is pure truthlaxxing.
"I feel so bad for her, her husband was truthlaxxing about his entire like and she now finds out it way more complicated then he make it seam."
"The witnesses statement relies on truthlaxxing rather than full disclosure."
"
"I can't take anything on the news seriously anymore. Everything they say is pure truthlaxxing.
"I feel so bad for her, her husband was truthlaxxing about his entire like and she now finds out it way more complicated then he make it seam."
"The witnesses statement relies on truthlaxxing rather than full disclosure."
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Truthlaxxing by CrowdCase April 27, 2026
Truthmaxxing
Deliberately or institutionally optimizing your life, thinking, and communicating with brutal honesty; even when it's socially costly. This is not just "being honest"nor is it being critical or cruel. It is the rejection of false identity, treating truth as a discipline you actively improve at, and being willing to sacrifice social relationships. The practice of truthmaxxing often a subconscious choice and instinctual behavior, but it can be a chosen life style. True truthmaxxing Involves cutting self-deception, having meta-cognition, challenging your own conclusions, and refusing comfortable narratives. It is also commonly seen in individuals with certain personality types, like INTP and from people who have traumatic intelligence.
"My friends stopped venting to me because I can't turn it off. Truthmaxxing isn't a phase it's a lifestyle."
"Why even ask me if you can't handle the answer? Truthmaxxing is literally my whole personality."
"He deleted all his social media, started admitting every assumption he made, and stopped softening feedback at work. It gets brutal. Worst part is that hes never wrong. Truthmaxxing is wild.."
"Why even ask me if you can't handle the answer? Truthmaxxing is literally my whole personality."
"He deleted all his social media, started admitting every assumption he made, and stopped softening feedback at work. It gets brutal. Worst part is that hes never wrong. Truthmaxxing is wild.."
Truthmaxxing by CrowdCase April 27, 2026