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Corrections & Takedown Policy

Amalgam News amalgamates reporting from named news outlets and public social media reaction into a single synthesized article, using an AI model to do the writing. Some articles carry an amber notice when the underlying story involves an accusation, an active legal proceeding, or another editorially sensitive topic.

That notice is a reading aid, not a disclaimer of responsibility. We are responsible for what we publish, including when an AI model wrote it. If a published article states something inaccurately, misleadingly, or in a way that isn't supported by its own sources, including in a headline, that's on us to fix, and we aim to do so promptly.

Requesting a correction

Email [email protected] with the article's headline or URL and what's wrong. Most articles also carry a "Request a correction" link directly under the headline that pre-fills this for you.

Tell us specifically what's inaccurate and, if you can, point to the source material that shows it. We'll check the original Event Coverage listed under "Sources" on the article and correct or remove the disputed claim if it isn't supported.

Requesting an urgent takedown

If an article identifies you or someone you know in a way that's seriously harmful, defamatory, or unsafe, for example naming a private individual in connection with a crime, an unresolved legal proceeding, or a sensitive personal matter, use the "Report a serious problem / request takedown" link on the article, or email [email protected] with "URGENT" in the subject. We treat these as priority and will take the article down or amend it while we look into the claim, rather than leaving it live during review.

How sources and dates are shown

Every article links the named outlets it was synthesized from under "Sources" in the sidebar. Risk-flagged articles also show the date the current version was generated, the date the article was first published, and whether it has since been updated with new sources. Whether a human editor reviewed the article before publication is also shown plainly: most articles publish automatically, and we say so rather than imply otherwise.