Corrections Policy

Last reviewed May 2026.

We make mistakes. When we do, we correct them in public, with the date of the correction and a clear note about what changed. This page documents the standard.

What counts as a correction

  • A factual error (a stat, a date, a name, a regulatory claim).
  • A misattribution of a quote or a source.
  • A recommendation that we’ve revised on the basis of new evidence.
  • A factual update where the underlying world changed (e.g., a new EU allergen requirement) and the post would otherwise mislead readers.

Style edits, fixed typos, and copy improvements that don’t alter meaning are not tracked here — they’re part of normal maintenance and don’t need a notice.

How corrections appear

Each correction adds a dated entry to the “Corrections” section at the foot of the affected post. The entry includes:

  • The date the correction was made.
  • A short summary of what was wrong and what is now correct.
  • Where appropriate, a link to the source that prompted the change.

If a correction is large enough that the post’s thesis or recommendation changes, we also update the post’s Last reviewed date so readers can see the page has been re-verified.

How to flag a correction

Anyone can flag a correction by emailing info@ibramdawwa-gmbh.de. Include:

  • The post URL.
  • The exact passage you believe is wrong.
  • The source you’d like us to consider.

We respond to every correction request within five business days, even if our conclusion is that no correction is warranted.

Withdrawal vs correction

In rare cases — a post that turns out to have been substantially built on a falsehood — we withdraw the post and replace it with an explanation, rather than silently editing it. The original URL returns a 410 Gone with the explanation page; we never quietly delete a published URL.