Our Commitment to Accuracy

AlgoFinance publishes financial and technology analysis for informational purposes. We take accuracy seriously and follow a documented review process (see How We Use AI) before anything is published. At the same time, we are honest about a basic reality: no publication is free of error, and financial data changes over time. This page explains how we source claims, and how we fix mistakes when they occur.

Our Sourcing Standard

  • Specific claims are attributed. When an article states a statistic, figure, or factual claim, we attribute it to a named source.
  • We verify against primary sources where possible. Rather than relying on second-hand summaries, we check figures against the original source (a company filing, a regulator, an official report, the organization actually cited) before publishing.
  • Uncertainty is flagged, not guessed. Any claim our review process cannot confirm is flagged internally and either verified, reworded, or removed before publication. We do not publish a number we could not stand behind, and we do not invent sources or quotes.

What Counts as an Error

We distinguish between:

  • Factual errors: an incorrect number, date, name, or statement of fact. These are corrected.
  • Outdated information: a claim that was accurate when published but has since changed (prices, rankings, regulatory status). We update evergreen articles where practical and mark material updates with a visible "Last updated" date.
  • Matters of analysis or opinion: forward-looking interpretation and analysis are not "errors" simply because events unfold differently. Markets are uncertain, and our analysis is clearly informational, not a guarantee (see our Disclaimer).

How We Handle Corrections

  • Minor typographical fixes (spelling, formatting) are made without a notice.
  • Material factual corrections are made promptly and noted in the article with the date of correction, so the record is transparent.
  • Significant errors that affect the substance of an article are corrected with a clear correction notice, and where warranted the article is updated or withdrawn.

We aim to review every good-faith error report promptly and to act on confirmed errors quickly. Prompt, transparent correction is a core part of how we operate.

How to Report an Error

If you spot something wrong, tell us. Email [email protected] with:

  1. The article URL.
  2. The specific claim you believe is incorrect (quote it if you can).
  3. If possible, a source for the correct information.

We welcome corrections from readers and from any company or person mentioned in our coverage.

See also: How We Use AI, Disclaimer, and our Advertising & Affiliate Disclosure.