Corrections Policy
If you have spotted a factual error in any Liberty Mundo article, we want to know. This page explains how we handle corrections, how to report one, and how we publish them.
Liberty Mundo writes about money, citizenship, and the law. The cost of a wrong number is real. So is the obligation to fix it in public.
Our commitment
Every Liberty Mundo article goes through a structured fact-verification process before it is published, including primary-source research and, where the topic warrants, expert review by qualified counsel or licensed agents. Our editorial standards page explains how the process works.
Even with that process, errors happen. Tax law shifts. Programs close between the fact-check and the publish. Numbers get transposed. When something is wrong, the cost falls on the reader, not on us. The right response is to fix the article, mark the change visibly, and tell anyone who relied on the original.
If you find a factual error in any article on this site, please tell us. We commit to:
- Acknowledging your report within two business days.
- Investigating the claim using primary sources, not memory.
- Updating the article and the article’s “Last updated” date if the report is verified.
- Publishing a visible correction note inside the article footer when the change is material.
- Listing material corrections in the public log on this page.
What counts as a correction
Not every change to an article is a “correction.” Here is how we distinguish between editorial updates, refreshes, and formal corrections.
Formal correction
A specific factual claim was wrong at the time of publication. Examples: an incorrect tax rate, a misstated passport ranking, a closed CBI program described as active, a misattributed quote. We update the body copy and add a dated correction note.
Update for currency
The article was correct when published, but the law has since changed. We update the body, refresh the last-updated date, and add a brief note explaining what changed and when. Not the same as a correction, but transparent.
Editorial refresh
Wording, structure, or formatting improvements that do not change the facts. These do not require a correction note. The last-updated date may or may not change, depending on the scope.
How to report an error
The fastest path is email. Send a short note to [email protected] with the subject line “Editorial correction request” and include:
- The full URL of the article.
- A direct quote of the sentence or claim you believe is wrong.
- Why you think it is wrong (a primary source link is ideal, but not required).
- Your name and how you would like to be credited if the correction is published. We will respect “do not credit” requests.
You can also reach us via the contact page or by WhatsApp at +1 645 236 9756. We do not run open comment threads on articles, so the correction email inbox is the official channel.
How corrections are published
For material corrections, we update the body copy, change the article’s “Last updated” date, and append a correction note inside the article footer in the following format:
The correction note stays visible permanently. We do not silently rewrite published articles. If a reader cited the original version somewhere else, the correction note tells them what to update on their end.
Public corrections log
Material corrections are listed below in reverse chronological order. Updates for currency (where the underlying law changed after publication) and editorial refreshes (formatting, wording) are not listed here, only inside the relevant article.
| Date | Article | Correction | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| No public corrections logged yet under the current policy. This log will be populated as material corrections are published. | |||
Right of reply
If you are an individual or organisation named in a Liberty Mundo article and you believe the article misrepresents you, please write to the editorial desk at [email protected] with the subject “Right of reply.” We will read every request, respond within five business days, and either publish a clarification, update the article, or explain why we believe the original article is supportable.
What we cannot correct
Some requests do not lead to changes. We will not remove an article because the subject matter is unflattering, will not unpublish accurate reporting on public policy or public-record matters, and will not update an article to reflect an opinion as if it were a fact. The corrections process is for factual accuracy, not for editorial direction.
Legal notices
For legal notices, takedown requests, or formal complaints, contact the Liberty Mundo legal mailbox at [email protected] with the subject “Legal notice.” Please do not send legal notices through the corrections inbox, the WhatsApp line, or the contact form.