Corrections policy

Mistakes happen. When they do, The Pixel Gazette corrects them quickly, transparently, and in a way that preserves the reader’s ability to see what changed. This page explains how we do that.

Corrections, updates, and retractions

A correction fixes a factual error in a published piece (a wrong name, number, date, or quote). An update adds new information to a developing story without the original piece having been wrong. A retraction withdraws a story entirely when its core claim is shown to be unsupported. We label each category distinctly so readers can tell the difference.

How to report an error

If you spot something wrong, send the article URL and a short description of the error to the editorial team at editor@pixelgazette.com.

How corrections appear on articles

When we make a substantive correction, we add a note to the article describing what changed and when, and we update the article’s modified timestamp. For material errors, the original wording is struck through rather than silently rewritten, so readers can see both the error and the fix.

Retractions

If a story’s core claim turns out to be unsupported and cannot be salvaged with a correction, we retract it. The URL remains live and serves a retraction notice explaining the issue and, where applicable, linking to follow-up coverage.