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Corrections Policy

TechCity Media is committed to accuracy. When we get something wrong, we correct it quickly, clearly, and transparently. This page explains what counts as an error, how we handle it, and how you can report one.

WHAT COUNTS AS AN ERROR
  • A factual inaccuracy: a wrong price, specification, date, name, statistic, or technical claim.
  • A misleading framing that misrepresents a product, person, company, or event.
  • An outdated fact that has changed and now materially affects the article’s conclusion or recommendation.
  • An attribution error: a quote or claim attributed to the wrong person or source.
WHAT WE DO WHEN WE FIND AN ERROR

We correct the article immediately upon confirming the error. We add a clearly labeled correction notice at the top of the article stating what was corrected and when. For errors that significantly change the article’s conclusion, we also update the article’s social media posts where possible.

We do not silently edit articles without noting the change. We do not delete articles to avoid accountability for errors.

CORRECTIONS VS. UPDATES

A correction is when we published something inaccurate. It is labeled as a correction, with the original error noted and the corrected information provided.

An update is when new information becomes available after publication, such as a product launching at a different price than announced, a company responding to a story, or a policy changing. Updates are labeled as updates with the date, but do not imply the original article was wrong.

HOW TO REPORT AN ERROR

If you find an error in a TechCity article, email us at hello[at]techcityng[dot]com Include the article URL, the specific error, and a source for the correct information if you have one. We review all error reports and aim to respond within 48 hours on business days.

We take reader corrections seriously. Some of our most important accuracy improvements have come from readers.

RETRACTIONS

In rare cases where an article contains errors significant enough that correcting them would change the story entirely, we may retract the article. Retracted articles are replaced with a retraction notice explaining why the article was withdrawn. We do not delete the URL.

Last updated: May 2026