The Plain-English TL;DR

How we fix mistakes:

  • If a news fact is incorrect, we fix the text and add a dated notice at the bottom of the story.
  • If a term definition is misleading, we update the glossary immediately.
  • You can submit a correction report via our Contact page or direct feedback.

Corrections policy

How we handle mistakes and updates.

If we get a fact wrong, we fix it. If a story changes after publication, we note the update. This site uses AI-assisted tools, and AI can introduce mistakes, awkward wording, or missing context. The goal is not to pretend errors never happen. The goal is to correct them clearly and fast.

What counts as a correction

Wrong names, dates, numbers, quotes, source descriptions, or factual claims. We also fix misleading wording that could confuse readers even if the main story point still stands.

What counts as an update

New statements from a company, regulator, or source after publication. We add updates when the new detail materially changes the story or adds needed context.

How to tell us

Email contact@ainewssimplified.com with the story link, the sentence in question, and any source that shows the correct information. If you think an AI-assisted draft introduced the error, say that too.

What a published correction looks like

When a factual error is corrected, we aim to label it plainly as a correction and note what changed. When new reporting is added that does not fix an error, we may use an update note instead. Quiet fixes are only for tiny formatting or spelling issues that do not change meaning.

This site is created and maintained with AI assistance. AI can be wrong. That is one reason we publish correction routes clearly and encourage readers to flag errors, missing context, or unsupported claims.