MoreBiography.com is committed to accuracy, clarity, and responsible editorial practice. Because the website publishes information about real people, historical figures, public personalities, and notable individuals across many fields, corrections are treated as an essential part of maintaining reader trust. Life stories can be complex. Public records can be incomplete. Older sources may contain discrepancies. New information may appear after an article is published. For that reason, MoreBiography.com maintains a clear Corrections Policy to guide how errors, outdated details, and unclear statements are reviewed and amended.
The purpose of this policy is to ensure that published Biographies remain useful, fair, and as accurate as possible. A biography is not merely a compilation of names and dates. It is a structured account of a person’s background, identity, work, influence, public milestones, and legacy. When a detail is wrong, ambiguous, or outdated, even a small error can distort the reader’s understanding. Corrections help preserve the integrity of each profile.
Commitment to Accuracy
MoreBiography.com aims to publish content based on publicly available information, credible media reports, official records, institutional profiles, interviews, verified public statements, and other reasonable reference points. Every effort is made to distinguish confirmed Facts from estimates, claims, rumors, and interpretation.
Accuracy is especially important when articles mention dates of birth, places of birth, family details, career milestones, awards, public roles, professional titles, Nationalities, Professions, and major achievements. These details form the foundation of biographical writing. If they are incorrect, the article becomes less reliable. Therefore, factual errors are reviewed carefully and corrected when sufficient evidence supports a change.
What May Be Corrected
Corrections may apply to a wide range of information. This includes spelling errors, incorrect names, inaccurate dates, outdated career information, wrong titles, broken links, unclear wording, or factual inconsistencies. More substantial corrections may involve information about Professions, Nationalities, major life events, public recognition, family background, awards, education, or historical context.
A correction may also be made when a Timeline entry is incomplete, misplaced, or inaccurate. Chronology matters in biography writing. A person’s career, achievements, controversies, and influence often make sense only when events are presented in the right order. When a Timeline requires improvement, MoreBiography.com may revise the entry, add missing context, or remove unsupported details.
Corrections may also relate to Net Worth information. Financial estimates are often uncertain because most public figures do not disclose full details about private assets, contracts, taxes, investments, royalties, property holdings, or business arrangements. If a Net Worth figure is outdated, exaggerated, poorly supported, or misleadingly presented, it may be revised, qualified, or removed. Estimated wealth should not be presented as a definitive financial statement unless supported by reliable documentation.
Handling Biographical Complexity
MoreBiography.com covers people from different Eras, cultures, industries, and public environments. A historical leader, a classical composer, a modern entrepreneur, a digital creator, and a contemporary athlete may all require different editorial treatment. Older records may conflict. Transliterated names may vary. Public titles may change across regions. Historical terminology may become antiquated or contentious.
For this reason, corrections are not handled mechanically. Context matters. The editorial standard is to consider the nature of the claim, the quality of available evidence, the sensitivity of the information, and the possible impact on the subject’s public portrayal. The goal is not only to fix visible mistakes, but also to prevent inadvertent misrepresentation.
Reader Correction Requests
Readers are welcome to report possible errors. A correction request should include the article title, the specific statement believed to be incorrect, a short explanation of the issue, and any supporting source that may help verify the claim. Useful sources may include official websites, public records, reputable interviews, verified social media posts, institutional pages, publisher profiles, sports databases, filmography records, company pages, or established news reports.
General disagreement with tone or emphasis may be reviewed, but not every disagreement results in a correction. MoreBiography.com distinguishes between factual error, interpretive difference, incomplete context, and personal preference. Corrections are made when the available evidence supports a factual revision or a meaningful clarification.
Review Process
When a correction request is received or an error is identified internally, the relevant article may be reviewed against available sources. The review may include checking names, dates, Facts, titles, career history, awards, family references, Nationalities, Professions, public statements, and related Timeline entries.
If the correction is straightforward, such as a typographical error or broken link, it may be fixed directly. If the issue involves disputed claims, sensitive personal details, legal matters, private family information, or Net Worth estimates, the review may require greater caution. Unsupported claims may be removed, softened, or rewritten to reflect uncertainty.
Updates Versus Corrections
Not every article change is a correction. Some changes are routine updates. For example, a celebrity may release a new film, an athlete may win another title, an entrepreneur may launch a new company, or a public figure may receive a new role. These updates improve the article but do not necessarily mean the previous version was inaccurate.
A correction addresses information that was wrong, misleading, incomplete in a material way, or poorly phrased. An update adds new information that became available after publication. Both are important, but they serve different editorial purposes.
Sensitive Information
MoreBiography.com handles sensitive information with restraint. Claims involving relationships, children, health, legal issues, religion, ethnicity, private addresses, personal disputes, or family matters require careful review. Public curiosity alone does not justify careless publication. If a detail is not relevant, not reliably sourced, or unnecessarily invasive, it may be excluded or removed.
This caution applies across all Biographies, regardless of fame, status, or public attention. Accuracy must be balanced with fairness.
Ongoing Improvement
MoreBiography.com recognizes that biographical information evolves. People change careers. Public records are corrected. Historical research develops. New interviews reveal additional context. Different Eras may be reinterpreted through better evidence. As a result, the website may revise articles over time to improve precision, readability, structure, and reliability.
The goal of this Corrections Policy is simple: to keep MoreBiography.com dependable for readers who want clear Facts, organized Biographies, careful Net Worth notes, accurate Timeline entries, and respectful coverage of people across many Professions, Nationalities, and Eras.