Corrections Policy

Corrections Policy

Headlinza aims to publish content that is clear, useful, and responsibly prepared.

Despite reasonable editorial care, errors can occasionally occur. Information can also become outdated as companies, technology, markets, sports events, health guidance, and travel conditions change.

This policy explains how we handle corrections and content updates.

What We May Correct

We may review content when there is a concern about:

  • An incorrect fact
  • A wrong name, date, number, or location
  • Outdated information
  • A misleading statement
  • Missing important context
  • A broken or incorrect reference
  • A significant spelling or formatting error
  • Information that no longer accurately reflects the subject

How to Report an Error

Please contact us through our Contact Us page.

Include:

  • The article title
  • The article URL
  • The specific information you believe is incorrect
  • A clear explanation of the issue
  • Reliable supporting evidence, where available

Providing complete information helps us review the issue more efficiently.

Our Review Process

When a correction request is received, we may:

  1. Review the relevant article.
  2. Check the disputed information.
  3. Examine reliable supporting sources.
  4. Contact the writer or editor where necessary.
  5. Update the article if a meaningful correction is required.

Not every disagreement will result in a correction.

Differences in opinion, interpretation, or preference are not automatically factual errors.

Minor Corrections

Small changes may include:

  • Spelling corrections
  • Grammar improvements
  • Formatting fixes
  • Broken link repairs
  • Minor wording improvements

These changes may be made without a formal correction notice.

Significant Corrections

For more important factual errors, we may:

  • Correct the article
  • Add clarification
  • Add updated context
  • Include an editor’s note where appropriate

The method used will depend on the nature and seriousness of the issue.

Updates Are Not Always Corrections

Some articles are updated because information naturally changes.

Examples include:

  • New technology features
  • Company developments
  • Financial information
  • Sports results
  • Travel requirements
  • Updated health information

An update does not necessarily mean the original article contained an error.

Content Removal

We do not normally remove published content simply because someone dislikes it.

However, content may be reviewed for removal or major revision in exceptional situations involving:

  • Serious factual concerns
  • Privacy or safety risks
  • Legal requirements
  • Duplicate publication
  • Material that no longer meets our standards

Each situation may be considered individually.

Contact Us About a Correction

We value readers who help us improve our work.

Please use our Contact Us page to report a possible error.