Our Commitment to Accuracy
The Central Bulletin corrects errors clearly and transparently. When we get something wrong, we fix it openly rather than quietly editing the original text. Our readers deserve to know when a published claim has changed and why.
Correction Categories
Minor corrections cover small factual errors such as misspelled names, incorrect dates, wrong figures, or broken links. We correct these within the article and add a labeled note at the bottom with a timestamp indicating what was changed and when.
Significant corrections materially affect the accuracy or meaning of an article. We correct the piece, add a prominent notice at the top of the article, update the publication timestamp, and where appropriate publish a standalone correction post linked from the original.
Retractions apply when an article contains a fundamental error that cannot be corrected without compromising the integrity of the entire piece. Retracted articles are replaced with a clear explanation of what was wrong and why the article was removed.
Our Correction Process
When a correction is needed, our editorial team verifies the error against a primary source before making any change. We do not issue corrections based on reader disagreement alone. A confirmed factual inaccuracy triggers an immediate correction regardless of when the article was published.
All corrections are timestamped. We note what was wrong, what the correct information is, and the date the correction was made. We do not delete correction notices from articles after the fact.
How to Report an Error
If you believe a published claim is factually incorrect, contact us at info@thecentralbulletin.com with the subject line: Correction Request. Include the article URL, the specific claim you believe is wrong, and a verifiable source supporting the correct information. We aim to review all correction requests within 24 hours.
What We Do Not Correct
We do not issue corrections for interpretive differences, editorial opinions, or analytical conclusions where reasonable disagreement exists. The TCB View section at the end of analysis pieces represents editorial perspective, not factual claims, and is not subject to factual correction. We also do not alter quotes, sourced statistics, or on-chain data that was accurate at the time of publication but has since changed due to market movement or new information.
Related Policies
See our Editorial Policy and Fact Checking Standards for the full picture of how we report and verify content before publication.

