Trending
COACHING NETWORKS STEER SELLERS TOWARD DFY STOREFRONT PACKAGES, OPERATORS TELL BUSINESS RADARAI AGENCIES REPORT TIGHTER SALES CYCLES FOR SMB WORKFLOW INSTALLS, VENDOR DATA SHOWSAIRBNB ARBITRAGE LISTINGS CLUSTER IN SECONDARY METROS AS SPREADS NARROW, BROKERS SAYAFFILIATE PUBLISHERS CHASE INTENT-HEAVY QUERIES AS AD RATES SWING, MEDIA BUYERS SAYFTC SCRUTINY OF INCOME CLAIMS IN ONLINE EDUCATION CONTINUES, FORMER STAFFERS SAYECOMMERCE ROLLUPS PRIORITIZE CASH CONTROLS OVER CATEGORY NOVELTY, INVESTORS NOTE

Corrections Policy

Business Radar corrects errors transparently. This page describes how we handle factual errors, clarifications, and updates after publication. Our commitments on independence, sourcing, and verification are set out in our editorial standards.

How to request a correction

If you believe a Business Radar article contains a factual error, send the article URL, a description of the error, and any supporting documentation to:

info@businessradar.org

We aim to respond to correction requests within two business days. Substantive disputes may take longer if they require additional reporting.

What we correct

We correct factual errors. Examples include misstated numbers, misattributed quotes, incorrect names or titles, wrong dates, and misidentified companies or individuals.

We update articles when new, material information emerges after publication — for example, when a company we covered issues a public statement that changes the relevant facts, or when a regulatory action we reported on is amended.

We do not retract or rewrite articles to accommodate subjects who disagree with our characterization or analysis. Disagreement with editorial judgment is not grounds for correction.

How corrections are displayed

When we correct a factual error, the correction appears at the bottom of the article in a labeled note that describes what was wrong and what was changed. The original incorrect text is not silently overwritten.

Major corrections — meaning corrections that change the central finding or claim of an article — are noted at the top of the article and dated.

Minor corrections — typos, formatting fixes, copy edits — are not logged.

When we update without correcting

Some changes are updates rather than corrections. Updates add information that was not available at publication time. For example, an article reporting on a pending regulatory action may be updated when the action is decided.

Updates are dated and labeled as such, distinct from corrections.

When we retract

Retractions are rare. We retract an article only when the central factual basis is shown to be wrong and cannot be corrected by amendment. Retracted articles remain online with a clear retraction notice that explains what was wrong and why. We do not delete retracted articles.

How to escalate

If you have requested a correction and disagree with our response, you can escalate to senior editorial leadership at:

info@businessradar.org

Mark the subject line "CORRECTION ESCALATION" and include the original correspondence.

Log of major corrections

A running log of major corrections is maintained internally. When the corrections record reaches a publishable scale, it will appear on this page.

Last reviewed: May 2026
Published by Business Radar Media LLC · Miami, Florida