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NewsFlash NGR Corrections Policy

NewsFlash NGR Corrections Policy explains exactly how we handle errors, update developing stories, and respond to reader correction requests. Accuracy matters here and this is how we protect it.

“Last Updated: June 2026

Things go wrong sometimes. Even here.”

Not often. Not intentionally. But journalism is done by people and people make mistakes. A wrong date. A misattributed quote. A detail that looked verified and turned out not to be.

When that happens we fix it. Quickly. Visibly. Without pretending it didn’t happen.

This page explains exactly how.

Before Publication
Every article published on NewsFlash NGR goes through editorial review before it goes live.

We check facts. We verify sources. We confirm details against primary information where we can.

NewsFlash NGR Corrections Policy

That process catches most errors before anyone reads them. Not all of them. The ones that slip through are what this policy is about.

When We Find An Error
If something we published turns out to be wrong we correct it.

What that looks like depends on what the error actually is.

Small errors — spelling, formatting, a name spelled incorrectly — get fixed quietly. They don’t change the meaning of the story and they don’t need an announcement.

Factual errors — wrong dates, incorrect figures, misattributed quotes, inaccurate claims — get corrected with an editor’s note explaining what changed and why. The original error doesn’t disappear quietly. The correction sits where people can see it.

Significant errors — corrections that materially change what a story actually means — get a clear editor’s note at the top of the article. Not buried at the bottom. At the top where it is impossible to miss.

Content that is entirely wrong or legally problematic — we remove it. This is rare but it happens and when it does we say so rather than letting the page quietly 404.

How To Tell Us Something Is Wrong
Spotted an error in one of our articles.

Send it to us directly.

info@newsflashngr.com

Tell us the article headline. Send us the link. Describe what you believe is wrong and include any supporting information or sources you have that back up your correction request.

We read every message that comes in. We review correction requests honestly — even when the correction is uncomfortable for us. Especially then.

How Long It Takes
We move as quickly as the verification allows.

Simple factual errors that are clearly wrong get corrected the same day in most cases. More complex issues that require additional verification take longer. “We take the time to get the correction right.

We don’t take that time to avoid making the correction.” If something is wrong it gets fixed.

Developing Stories
Breaking news changes as more information becomes available.

Articles get updated. Details get added. Early reports that turned out to be incomplete get corrected as the full picture emerges.

This is normal responsible reporting. It is not an attempt to hide what we originally published. When an update significantly changes the meaning of a story we add an editor’s note explaining what changed and when.

Scholarships And Job Opportunities
We verify every opportunity before it goes up.

But deadlines change. Requirements get updated. Institutions modify their criteria after we publish.

Before you submit any application confirm the details directly with the official organization. We catch most changes. We don’t catch everything. Your application is too important to depend entirely on any single source.

Read Our Editorial Policy

If an opportunity we published turns out to contain wrong information we update it as soon as we know.

Entertainment Reporting
Rumours move fast in entertainment journalism. Faster than verification can always keep up with.

We try not to publish speculation as fact. When something we reported turns out to be wrong or incomplete we correct it the same way we correct anything else on this platform.

Entertainment stories get the same corrections process as political stories. The subject matter is different. The standard isn’t.

The Honest Part
Getting a correction request is not comfortable.

It means something we published was wrong and someone noticed. That is not a pleasant thing to sit with. But the response to that discomfort is not to ignore the request or find reasons to dismiss it.

The response is to look at it honestly and fix what needs fixing.

“Platforms that never publish corrections are not more accurate than platforms that do.

They are just less honest about it.”

That is the only version of this that actually builds trust over time.

Questions About This Policy
info@newsflashngr.com

We read everything.

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