Introduction
At Live Crypto Market Cap, we take editorial quality, accuracy, clarity, and transparency seriously. In the cryptocurrency industry, inaccurate information, unclear wording, outdated data, or misleading presentation can affect how readers understand market events, blockchain projects, digital assets, and related risks.
This Editing Policy explains how Live Crypto Market Cap reviews, edits, updates, clarifies, and corrects content published on our Website, newsletters, and related content channels, collectively referred to as the “Service”. It also explains how readers can report potential issues and what they can expect after doing so.
This Policy works together with our Editorial Policy and Verification Policy Information to help ensure that our content remains accurate, reliable, useful, and trustworthy for a global audience.
Our Commitment to Editorial Quality
We aim to publish content that is accurate, clear, balanced, well-structured, and useful to readers. Before and after publication, our editorial process is designed to improve the quality of our content while maintaining transparency and accountability.
Our core principles include:
- Accuracy: We verify factual claims and correct confirmed errors.
- Clarity: We edit content to make complex crypto and blockchain topics easier to understand.
- Transparency: We clearly identify significant corrections, clarifications, or updates where appropriate.
- Consistency: We apply editorial standards across news, analysis, reviews, educational content, newsletters, and other formats.
- Accountability: We take responsibility for content issues and address them promptly.
- Continuous improvement: We use editorial feedback, reader reports, and internal review to improve our process.
Types of Editorial Changes
Live Crypto Market Cap may edit, update, clarify, or correct content for several reasons, depending on the nature and significance of the issue.
Factual Edits
Factual edits address incorrect or incomplete statements of fact. These may include:
- Incorrect dates, times, or numerical data
- Wrong names, titles, or company information
- Misstatements about events, actions, announcements, or partnerships
- Inaccurate cryptocurrency prices or market data
- Incorrect technical specifications or protocol details
- Wrong blockchain addresses or transaction information
- Misattributed quotes or statements
Technical Edits
Technical edits address issues in crypto, blockchain, security, or software-related explanations. These may include:
- Inaccurate explanations of blockchain technology
- Incorrect descriptions of consensus mechanisms
- Errors in code examples or smart contract information
- Mistakes in security or cryptographic concepts
- Incorrect protocol specifications
- Misleading descriptions of technical processes
Analytical Edits
Analytical edits address problems in interpretation, reasoning, or market commentary. These may include:
- Misinterpretation of data or statistics
- Conclusions that are not sufficiently supported by evidence
- Flawed reasoning in market analysis
- Incomplete comparisons between cryptocurrencies, protocols, platforms, or technologies
- Overstated or unclear analytical claims
Attribution Edits
Attribution edits address sourcing, credit, or reference issues. These may include:
- Misattributed quotes or statements
- Incorrect source citations
- Wrong credit for images, charts, data, or research
- Broken, outdated, or incorrect links
- Missing attribution for third-party materials
Editorial Presentation Edits
Presentation edits improve how content is structured, labeled, or understood. These may include:
- Headlines that do not accurately reflect article content
- Missing context that may affect reader understanding
- Incorrect categorization, tagging, or labeling
- Errors in images, charts, graphics, or captions
- Formatting issues that create confusion
- Unclear wording, structure, or flow
How We Handle Editorial Changes
When a content issue is identified, either internally or by readers, we follow a structured editorial review process.
Step 1: Review
We first assess the issue to determine its nature and significance. This may include:
- Reviewing the original article or newsletter
- Checking the original source material
- Reviewing relevant data, documents, or links
- Consulting editors, writers, or subject-matter experts
- Assessing whether the issue affects accuracy, clarity, context, or reader understanding
Step 2: Verification
Before making factual or technical changes, we verify the correct information. This may include:
- Checking multiple credible sources
- Reviewing official statements, filings, documents, or blockchain data
- Consulting subject-matter experts where necessary
- Reviewing internal notes or source documentation
- Determining whether the issue is an error, clarification, update, or editorial improvement
Step 3: Editing
Once the issue is reviewed and verified, we may:
- Revise inaccurate or unclear information
- Add missing context
- Improve article structure, readability, or clarity
- Update outdated information
- Correct source links, citations, or attribution
- Add a correction, clarification, update notice, or editor’s note where appropriate
- Update timestamps where relevant
Step 4: Notification
For significant editorial changes, we may also:
- Add a visible notice to the article
- Post an update on social media if the article was promoted there
- Send a notice to newsletter subscribers if the issue appeared in a newsletter
- Contact individuals, companies, projects, or organizations directly affected by the issue
- Add an editor’s note where additional explanation is needed
Step 5: Internal Review
After making significant changes, we may:
- Review the full article for related issues
- Analyze how the issue occurred
- Identify workflow or verification improvements
- Document lessons learned for training and quality control
Editing Standards
Live Crypto Market Cap applies consistent standards when editing published content.
Editing Notice Format
When an editorial notice is required, it may include:
- The word “Correction”, “Clarification”, “Update”, or “Editor’s Note”
- The date the notice was added
- A clear explanation of what changed
- The correct or updated information
- A note that the article has been updated, where appropriate
Placement of Editorial Notices
The placement of notices depends on the significance of the change:
- Significant corrections: Usually appear near the top of the article or in a prominent editor’s note.
- Clarifications: May appear near the relevant section or at the top of the article, depending on importance.
- Updates: May appear at the top of the article, in the body text, or in a timestamped update section.
- Minor edits: May be made without a formal notice if they do not affect meaning.
- Newsletter edits: May appear in a later newsletter or dedicated notice where necessary.
Visual Indicators
Edited content may include:
- Updated timestamps
- Correction notices
- Clarification notices
- Update notes
- Editor’s notes
- Clear separation between original reporting and later developments
We generally avoid repeating incorrect information unnecessarily, especially if doing so could spread confusion or misinformation. Instead, we explain the change clearly and provide the accurate information.
Minor Editorial Edits
Minor editorial edits are changes that do not significantly affect the meaning, accuracy, or reader understanding of an article.
Examples include:
- Spelling errors
- Grammar mistakes
- Punctuation errors
- Minor formatting issues
- Display problems
- Typos in non-essential text
- Small style adjustments
- Broken formatting that does not change meaning
- Minor wording improvements for readability
Minor edits may be made immediately without a formal notice. They may still be documented internally for quality control and training purposes.
Significant Editorial Edits
Significant editorial edits involve changes that could materially affect reader understanding or the meaning of the content.
Examples include:
- Incorrect cryptocurrency prices or market data
- Incorrect dates for important events
- Misidentification of people, companies, projects, or organizations
- Wrong technical specifications or protocol details
- Incorrect financial information or investment-related data
- Misattributed quotes or statements
- Errors in regulatory, legal, security, or risk-related information
- Claims that could affect market perception or reader decisions
- Missing context that could mislead readers
When a significant issue is verified, we aim to:
- Address it promptly
- Add a visible correction, clarification, update, or editor’s note where appropriate
- Conduct senior editorial review where necessary
- Review the article for related issues
- Correct related social media or newsletter content where appropriate
- Analyze the cause internally
- Improve processes to reduce similar issues in the future
Corrections, Clarifications, Updates, and Editorial Improvements
Not every editorial change has the same meaning. Live Crypto Market Cap distinguishes between corrections, clarifications, updates, and general editorial improvements.
Corrections
Corrections fix information that was wrong at the time of publication.
Example: An article misstated a date, price, name, quote, transaction amount, protocol detail, or regulatory status.
Clarifications
Clarifications address information that was technically accurate but unclear, incomplete, or potentially misleading.
Clarifications may be issued when:
- Original wording was ambiguous
- Important context was missing
- Readers could reasonably misunderstand the content
- Additional explanation is needed to prevent confusion
- A headline or summary did not fully reflect the article’s nuance
Updates
Updates add new information or reflect events that occurred after publication. The original information may have been accurate at the time it was published.
Example: A company releases a new statement, a regulator publishes new guidance, a project changes its roadmap, or market data changes after the original article was published.
Editorial Improvements
Editorial improvements enhance readability, formatting, structure, or user experience without changing the factual meaning of the content.
Examples include:
- Improving sentence structure
- Adding subheadings
- Updating formatting
- Improving chart labels or captions
- Adding internal links
- Strengthening context or explanations
- Reorganizing content for better readability
Reporting Editorial Issues
We encourage readers to report potential errors, unclear wording, outdated information, broken links, or other editorial issues. Every report is reviewed seriously.
How to Report an Issue
Readers may report an issue by using the contact information provided on the Website. If a specific correction request form, editorial feedback form, or contact email is available, readers should use that channel.
What to Include in a Report
To help us review reports efficiently, please include:
- The article URL
- The specific statement, paragraph, chart, image, or section in question
- A clear explanation of the issue
- The correct or updated information, if known
- Supporting sources, links, documents, or evidence
- Your contact information, if you would like a response
What Happens After You Report
After receiving a report, we aim to:
- Acknowledge receipt where appropriate
- Review the reported issue
- Verify the relevant information
- Determine whether a correction, clarification, update, editorial improvement, or no change is required
- Inform the reporter of the outcome where practical
Our Review Process
When we receive an editorial report or identify a potential issue internally, we follow a structured review process.
Initial Assessment
We first assess:
- Whether the issue is factual, technical, analytical, attribution-related, editorial, or stylistic
- Whether it is an error, clarification, update, opinion disagreement, or interpretation difference
- How significant the issue is
- Whether immediate action is needed
- Whether the issue could mislead readers or cause harm
Verification
We may then:
- Check original source materials
- Consult multiple independent sources
- Review internal verification notes
- Consult subject-matter experts
- Confirm what the correct information should be
Decision
After review, we may take one of the following actions:
Correct the Content
If the report is accurate and the content contains an error, we correct the article.
Clarify the Content
If the content is accurate but unclear or incomplete, we add clarification.
Update the Content
If new information has emerged after publication, we update the article.
Improve the Content
If the issue relates to readability, formatting, structure, or user experience, we may make editorial improvements.
Make No Change
If the original content is accurate, clear, and properly supported, no change may be made.
Conduct Additional Review
If the matter is complex, technical, legal, regulatory, or developing, we may conduct further review before making a decision.
Implementation
If an edit, correction, clarification, or update is warranted, we may:
- Revise the article
- Add an appropriate notice or editor’s note
- Update timestamps where relevant
- Review the article for related issues
- Respond to the person who reported the issue where appropriate
- Correct related social media or newsletter content if necessary
- Document the issue for internal review
Editing Timeline
We aim to address content issues as quickly as possible while maintaining accuracy. Actual timing depends on the complexity of verification required.
Immediate Priority
We prioritize immediate review for:
- Factual errors in breaking news
- Errors that could cause immediate financial harm
- Errors in critical safety or security information
- Errors that seriously misrepresent individuals, companies, projects, or organizations
- Issues involving security vulnerabilities or user protection
Same-Day Priority
We aim to handle significant issues promptly, including:
- Major factual errors in recent articles
- Errors that materially affect article meaning
- Technical errors in educational content
- Attribution errors involving important sources or quotes
- Misleading headlines or missing context that could affect understanding
Extended Review
Some edits may require more time, especially when they involve:
- Older articles
- Complex technical issues
- Legal or regulatory matters
- Conflicting sources
- Expert consultation
- Historical data review
- Blockchain data verification
These timelines are guidelines rather than guarantees.
Transparency in Editing
Readers should understand when content has been materially changed and why.
What We Disclose
Editorial notices may disclose:
- That a correction, clarification, update, or editor’s note was added
- When it was added
- What was incorrect, unclear, or changed
- What the correct or updated information is
- That the article has been updated
What We Typically Do Not Disclose
We may not disclose:
- Internal editorial discussions
- Names of individual staff members involved in the issue
- Confidential source information
- Sensitive details that could create additional harm
- Extended internal process details
Permanent Record
Significant correction or clarification notices generally remain visible on articles permanently.
We do not remove correction notices simply because time has passed. We also avoid repeating incorrect information unnecessarily if doing so could spread misinformation.
Internal records of significant editorial changes may be maintained for quality control, accountability, and training.
What We Do Not Treat as Editorial Errors
Certain issues are not usually treated as editorial errors.
Matters of Opinion or Analysis
We generally do not treat the following as factual errors:
- Editorial opinions
- Analytical judgments
- Market interpretations
- Predictions or projections
- Subjective assessments
However, factual claims used to support opinions or analysis remain subject to review and correction.
Third-Party Statements
We do not “correct” quoted statements made by third parties simply because the statement itself is disputed or later challenged. However, we may add context, note that claims are disputed, or update the article if necessary.
Reputation Management Requests
We do not remove or alter accurate information solely because it is unfavorable to an individual, company, project, or organization.
We do not change editorial analysis, factual descriptions, or fair characterizations because of commercial pressure, reputation concerns, or personal preference.
Information That Was Accurate When Published
If information was accurate at the time of publication but later becomes outdated, we may add an update, not a correction.
Formatting Preferences
Differences in style, layout, wording preference, or presentation may not qualify as editorial issues unless they create confusion, reduce accessibility, or affect factual understanding.
Appeals Process
If you report an editorial issue and disagree with our decision, you may request a review.
How to Appeal
To request an appeal, please provide:
- The original article URL
- A summary of the issue
- Why you disagree with our decision
- Additional evidence, sources, or documentation
- The specific outcome you are requesting
What Happens Next
A senior editor or appropriate reviewer may re-examine the issue, review the evidence, and provide a final determination where practical.
Appeal Timeline
We aim to review appeals in a reasonable timeframe. Complex appeals may take longer, especially when they involve technical, legal, regulatory, or market data issues.
Contact
If you believe content published by Live Crypto Market Cap contains an error, requires editing, needs clarification, or should be updated, please contact us through the contact information provided on the Website.