Corrections
The CyberSignal corrects errors promptly, transparently, and on the record.
When we get something wrong, we update the original article, add a correction notice at the top of the piece, refresh the article's "last modified" timestamp, and log the correction here. Substantive corrections — to facts, figures, attribution, attribution direction, or any material claim — are always logged. Typo and formatting fixes are made silently.
How to Request a Correction
If you believe we have published something inaccurate, please email corrections@thecybersignal.com with:
- The article URL.
- The specific passage you believe is incorrect.
- The correct information, with a source we can verify.
We aim to respond to correction requests within one business day. Sources will be kept confidential where appropriate.
What Counts as a Correction
- Substantive correction — a change to a fact, figure, name, date, attribution, scope, or causal claim. Always logged below with the date, the affected article, and a summary of what changed.
- Update — new information added to a developing story. Noted in-line in the article, not necessarily logged here unless it changes a prior claim.
- Clarification — a rephrasing for accuracy or to remove ambiguity without changing the substantive claim. Noted at the top of the affected article.
- Typo and formatting fix — corrected silently. We do not log these.
Editorial Responsibility
The CyberSignal is edited by Nicholas Robert. All correction decisions are his. Disagreements about a correction request are resolved by the editor; readers who remain unsatisfied are welcome to write directly to nicholas@thecybersignal.com.
Correction Log
No corrections logged to date.
Corrections will be posted here as they occur, with the most recent at the top. Each entry will include the date of correction, the affected article, and a brief description of what was changed and why.