Last updated: April 23, 2026
The Everyday Economy wants readers to be able to trust what they are reading. When a story contains a factual error, misleading phrasing, broken attribution, or outdated context that materially changes understanding, the site should correct it.
How To Report A Problem
Send correction requests to duddms613@naver.com and include:
- the page URL
- the headline
- the specific line or claim at issue
- a source or explanation that supports the correction request
What May Be Corrected
Corrections may include updates to:
- numbers, dates, names, and source attribution
- headlines or excerpts that overstate the source material
- body text that is unclear, incomplete, or misleading
- broken links or missing source references
- contextual framing when a development changes after publication
Major And Minor Changes
Minor edits include spelling fixes, punctuation fixes, formatting cleanup, or wording changes that do not alter meaning.
Major edits include factual corrections, material sourcing fixes, meaningful headline changes, or updates that change what readers should take away from the article.
How Corrections Are Handled
The publisher may revise the affected page directly. When a mistake changes the substance of the article, the correction should prioritize clarity and accuracy over preserving the original wording.