When we get it wrong — you'll see it here.
Corrections are a strength, not an embarrassment. When we spot a factual error we document what was wrong, what's right and when we changed it — on the article itself and in this open log.
- Published corrections
- 0
- Response time
- ≤ 24 h
- Method
- Open & traceable
- Note on the article
- Always visible
How we handle an error
Four steps from report to fix. The same process whether we find it internally or a reader flags it.
- 1. Report
A reader, researcher, source or internal reviewer flags a claim. Nothing is changed until we've read the primary source.
- 2. Verification
An editor reads the primary source, compares it to the article and decides what's wrong. We contact the original source when it helps.
- 3. Fix
The article is updated. We never edit silently — the article carries a visible correction note and a short description of what changed.
- 4. Log
The correction is published here with a timestamp and a link to the article. dateModified is refreshed so search engines see the story as revised.
Three levels — and how they differ
Not every change is equally serious. Here's how we classify them, and what each level means for you as a reader.
- Correction
Factual error that changes meaning
Wrong number, wrong name, wrong date, or a quote that doesn't exist in the source. The article carries a visible correction box and appears in this log.
- Clarification
Wording could mislead, facts unchanged
The sentence could be misread. We clarify without changing the facts, and note it on the article.
- Update
New facts have emerged
Developments that change the picture — e.g. a regulator issues a statement after we publish. The article is updated with a fresh timestamp.
Open corrections log
The full archive of every published correction, newest first. Search by article title or by what was wrong.
No published corrections yet.
That doesn't mean we're flawless — it means no factual error has required a published correction yet. When one does, it appears here. In the meantime: our process, how to report an error, and our editorial methodology.
Our policy: the correction is published at the same moment the article is updated. No silent edits.
Spotted an error? Tell us.
We take every report seriously and read the primary source before we judge. The more precisely you can point to the error, the faster we can fix it.
- Link directly to the article you're flagging.
- Quote the sentence or claim that's wrong.
- Attach a primary source or link to the evidence — official if possible.
- Say if it's urgent (e.g. a wrong regulatory interpretation).