Last updated: May 2026

Our commitment

We aim for accuracy in everything we publish. When we get something wrong, we correct it transparently and quickly.

Types of corrections

Minor edits (typos, formatting)

Typos, broken links, formatting issues, and similar non-substantive issues are corrected without a notice. We may still update the article's modified date.

Factual corrections

When a substantive fact is wrong — a statistic, a vendor's name, a feature description, a date, a price — we:

  • Correct the error in the article body
  • Add a clearly-labeled correction notice at the top of the article
  • Note the original error and the correct information
  • Include the date of correction
  • Update the article's dateModified in the schema

Substantive updates

When new information substantially changes the picture (a vendor reverses a decision, a product is rebranded, a price changes), we may update the article with a clearly-labeled "Update" notice rather than a correction.

Retractions

If an article is fundamentally wrong (based on bad sourcing, misunderstanding, or other major errors), we may retract it. Retracted articles remain at their URL with a clear retraction notice explaining what was wrong and why.

Example correction format

Correction (May 15, 2026): An earlier version of this article stated Make.com's Pro plan costs $9/month. The actual price is $18.82/month. The article has been updated. We apologize for the error.

Reporting errors

If you spot a factual error in our content, please let us know via:

We typically respond within 24-48 hours and issue corrections within 72 hours of verifying the error.

What we don't correct

We don't correct opinions, analysis, or predictions just because someone disagrees with them. Editorial perspective is identified as such, and counterpoints are welcomed via our contact channels. We're happy to add updates if circumstances change, but we don't retroactively change our analysis to match outcomes.