Corrections Policy
How MIAMI.AI handles errors, clarifications, and takedown requests.
Last updated: April 27, 2026
Our commitment
MIAMI.AI is committed to accuracy. When we make a mistake — whether a factual error, a misattribution, a mischaracterization, or a misleading headline — we correct it promptly, transparently, and visibly. Credibility is the paper's only real asset, and corrections protect it rather than diminish it.
How to report an error
If you believe something we published is inaccurate, misleading, or unfair, email us with the URL of the article, the specific passage in question, and — where possible — documentation supporting the correction. We aim to respond within two business days. Write to contact@miami.ai.
How we handle corrections
Substantive corrections are made by updating the article in place and appending a clearly labeled editor's note at the end of the piece stating what was corrected, what the article originally said, and when the correction was made. The original URL is preserved. We do not silently rewrite history.
Minor typographical, grammatical, or formatting fixes are made without a published editor's note, consistent with industry convention, but the article's "last updated" timestamp reflects every edit.
Categories of correction
We distinguish between the following, and label them accordingly in editor's notes:
- Correction — a factual error has been fixed (a name, a date, a figure, a quote).
- Clarification — the facts were correct but the framing was ambiguous or could be reasonably misread, and we have sharpened the language.
- Update — new information has come to light after publication and has been incorporated. The original reporting stands.
- Retraction — a piece has been withdrawn in full because its core premise was incorrect. Retracted pieces are removed from the live site but the URL returns a public notice explaining the retraction.
Takedown and unpublishing requests
We evaluate unpublishing requests on a case-by-case basis. We will not unpublish an accurate article solely because its subject now finds it inconvenient. We will consider unpublishing when a piece is factually wrong and cannot be meaningfully corrected, when it contains private information that should never have been public, when a source's participation was procured through misrepresentation, or when legal obligations require it.
AI-assisted content and corrections
MIAMI.AI practices AI-accelerated journalism with human editors in the loop. Errors in AI-drafted passages are corrected by the same process as any other error — the accountable editor who signed off on publication is accountable for the correction. The use of AI tools in drafting is never an excuse for inaccuracy.
Contact
Corrections, clarifications, takedown requests, and editorial feedback should be sent to contact@miami.ai.