FrozeNet

Corrections Policy

FrozeNet aims to publish accurate, useful and properly contextualized B2B editorial coverage. Errors can still occur. This policy explains how readers, companies and industry professionals can request a correction or clarification.

What can be corrected

FrozeNet may correct or clarify material where an article contains a factual error, outdated reference, incorrect company name, wrong product or facility reference, misleading figure, broken context or wording that could reasonably create factual confusion.

Examples may include incorrect dates, incorrect company descriptions, outdated ownership references, inaccurate regulatory context, wrong geographic information, incorrect attribution, or a figure that no longer reflects the cited context.

What is not automatically a correction

Commercial disagreement with an article does not automatically require a correction. A company may disagree with an editorial interpretation, market reading or wording choice without the article being factually wrong.

FrozeNet will consider correction requests based on the accuracy and fairness of the published material, not simply on whether the material is commercially inconvenient for a company or organization.

How to request a correction

Correction requests should be sent to office@frozenet.com. To help us review the issue, please include:

  • the article title or URL;
  • the specific sentence, paragraph or claim you believe is incorrect;
  • a clear explanation of the issue;
  • supporting information or a public source where available;
  • your name, organization and role where relevant.

How FrozeNet reviews correction requests

Correction requests are reviewed under FrozeNet's editorial responsibility. We may check the original source material, compare public information, ask for clarification or review whether the article needs a correction, update or wording change.

Where the issue is minor, such as a typo, formatting issue or small wording adjustment that does not alter the meaning of the article, FrozeNet may correct the article without a formal correction note.

Where a factual correction materially changes the meaning of an article, FrozeNet may add a correction note, update note or clarification where appropriate.

Updates and clarifications

Some changes are not corrections. An article may be updated because new information became available, a company changed its position, a regulatory process moved forward, a facility opened or closed, or a market figure was replaced by newer data.

In such cases, FrozeNet may update or clarify the article to keep it useful for readers. Whether an update note is added depends on the nature and significance of the change.

Sponsored content and corrections

Sponsored articles, advertisement features and partner content may also be corrected where factual errors are identified. Paid status does not prevent correction.

At the same time, sponsors or commercial partners do not have the right to rewrite independent editorial coverage or remove accurate information simply because they disagree with the editorial framing.

AI-assisted workflow and correction responsibility

FrozeNet uses an AI-assisted editorial workflow, but AI tools are not treated as factual authorities. If an error appears in a published article, correction responsibility remains with FrozeNet.

Readers should not assume that an error is acceptable because AI tools were used in production. Published material remains subject to editorial review and correction where justified.

Contact

Correction requests can be sent to: office@frozenet.com