Corrections Policy
Accuracy is the product. When a published article contains a factual error, an outdated number, or a mis-attributed source, we correct it. This page explains how corrections are handled and keeps a public log of material changes.
Last reviewed: June 9, 2026
What counts as a correction
A correction covers a factual error, an outdated or misstated figure, a mis-attributed or broken source, or a claim the cited evidence does not actually support. Routine copy edits, clarifications, and scheduled refreshes with new evidence are part of normal maintenance and are not logged as corrections unless they change a material fact or conclusion.
How we handle errors
Verified factual issues are corrected promptly. When a correction changes a material fact or the conclusion of a piece, we note the change rather than editing silently, and we update the article's last-modified date. If a claim cannot be re-grounded in a credible source, we remove or down-weight it rather than leave it standing.
How to report an error
Readers and AI agents citing our work can flag a suspected error — a wrong number, a stale figure, or unclear sourcing — through the contact page. Please include the article URL and, where possible, the primary source that supports the correction so we can verify it quickly.
Corrections log
No corrections have been logged yet. Verified material corrections will appear here with the date and a short description.