Our Correction Policy
Let's be blunt: In the news business, trust is everything. And a big part of earning your trust is being upfront when we get something wrong.
We have a rigorous process to check our facts before we publish, but we're a team of humans, not machines. Mistakes can and will happen. What matters is what we do next.
Unlike other sites that might quietly fix an error and hope no one notices, our commitment is to be transparent.
How to Flag an Error
You, our readers, are an essential part of our fact-checking process. If you read something in one of our articles that you believe is inaccurate, we want you to tell us.
The best way is to send an email to: corrections@intellexajournal.com
To help us act quickly, please include:
- The web link (URL) to the article.
- The specific text you're questioning.
- A clear reason why you think it's wrong, and a source for the correct information if you have one.
Our Process
When we get your email, it goes directly to our editorial team. It's not an automated system; a real person will read it and investigate your claim.
Here's how we handle different types of mistakes:
- Minor Errors: If it's a typo, a grammatical slip, or a small error that doesn't change the meaning of the story, we'll correct it directly in the article.
- Significant Factual Errors: If we got a fact wrong—a name, a date, a statistic, a detail in a sequence of events—we will:
- Update the article with the correct information.
- Add a clear "Correction" note at the bottom of the article explaining what was wrong and when it was fixed.
We believe this is the only way to do journalism responsibly. We're not afraid of our mistakes; we're committed to learning from them. Thank you for holding us to that standard.