Corrections Policy
How we handle factual errorsNewspectives content is AI-generated. Errors will happen. This page documents how we handle them, and provides a public log of every correction issued.
How to report an error
Email info@newspectives.com with:
- The URL of the topic page containing the error
- The specific perspective (e.g. "USA", "Common Ground", "Humanitarian")
- The exact text that is incorrect
- The correct information, ideally with a link to a primary source
How corrections are processed
- Acknowledgment. We respond to error reports within 5 working days.
- Verification. The reported error is checked against the primary sources cited in the perspective and against additional independent sources where relevant.
- Correction. If the error is confirmed, the affected perspective is updated. The topic's NewsArticle schema dateModified is refreshed to reflect the change.
- Public log. A summary of the correction (date, topic, what was wrong, what it was changed to) is added to the log below.
Corrections may take the form of (a) updating a specific factual claim in a single perspective, (b) regenerating an entire perspective if the framing was systematically wrong, or (c) in rare cases of unsalvageable error, removing the topic from the public archive entirely with a note explaining why.
What we will NOT correct
- Tone, framing, or rhetorical posture of a regional perspective. Those are intentionally partisan and reflect how the region tends to frame the story. They are not factual claims to be corrected.
- Satirical content in The Jester perspective. Clearly labelled parody is not subject to factual correction.
- Disagreements with editorial scope. A request to add or remove a perspective category, change the source list for a region, or suppress a particular angle is feedback, not a correction request.
Corrections log
No corrections have been issued at this time. Every correction made going forward will be listed here with date, topic URL, perspective, and a summary of what changed.
This log begins May 2026 and will accumulate over time. For the editorial principles that govern what we publish in the first place, see editorial standards. For the technical pipeline that generates each analysis, see methodology.