Corrections Policy

How TaxSocial handles factual error reports

Tax content has to be right. When a reader points out a factual error, we look at it and, if it stands up to a primary-source check, we fix it. This page tells you how to report errors and what we try to do about them.

What We Treat as a Correction

We treat the following as factual errors that warrant a correction:

  • Wrong section number, sub-section, clause or notification reference
  • Incorrect tax rate, threshold, due date or compliance deadline
  • Misstatement of the law as it stood on the article's publication date
  • Mis-attribution of a judgment, name, designation, or institution
  • Numerical errors in worked examples that change the outcome
  • Broken or wrong link to a primary source (Act, notification, circular, judgment)

Editorial judgments, opinions, predictions and matters of style are not corrections. We may publish a follow-up article addressing a substantive disagreement.

How to Report an Error

Please write to us with as much specificity as possible:

  • The article URL or title
  • The exact passage you believe is incorrect
  • What you believe the correct position is
  • A primary source we can verify it against (Act, notification, judgment) where possible

Channels:

How We Handle Reports

We act on corrections on a best-effort basis. There is no guaranteed turnaround time. In practice:

  • We try to acknowledge reports promptly.
  • If the report is clear-cut and we can verify it against a primary source, we update the article and refresh its last-updated date.
  • If the report is in dispute — for example, where two readings of a notification are reasonable — we may publish our reasoning rather than make a silent edit.
  • Cosmetic issues (typos, formatting) are folded into the next routine update.

Edits to user-submitted articles may also be coordinated with the author where practical.

Takedown & Right-of-Reply Requests

If you believe an article infringes copyright, defames a person or firm, or contains personal information shared without consent, please write to [email protected] with the URL, the specific passage, and the basis of your request. We follow the takedown procedure set out in our Terms of Service.

Where an article discusses a named individual, firm or institution and you believe the discussion is materially incomplete or inaccurate, we will consider publishing a brief response, depending on what reads more fairly to the reader.

No Warranty

This page describes what we try to do, not a contractual commitment. The Platform is provided on an "AS IS" basis. Nothing on this page creates a guaranteed service level, an obligation to publish a correction in a particular form, or any other liability. See our Terms of Service for the full position.

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