Corrections and Updates
Regulation moves. When a source changes, a date shifts, or we get something wrong, we fix the page and date the change.
We fix it, and we date it
If a source changes, a date shifts, or we get something wrong, we update the page and note the correction clearly with the date and nature of the change. We do not quietly edit away an error. The record stays honest because the change is visible.
This matters more for a regulation tracker than for most coverage. Rules get proposed, withdrawn, superseded, delayed, enjoined, or amended, sometimes within days. A development we reported accurately on Monday can be wrong by Friday through no error of ours. When that happens, the page is updated and the status is reset to match the primary source, not left to age into a quiet inaccuracy.
Report an error or a missed development
If you see an error or a missed development, email anthony@theleveragedyears.com with the source. The source is the part that lets us act quickly. Point us to the statute, court order, agency release, or docket entry, and we will check it against the page and correct or update it as needed.
Send the primary source
- A link to the primary document, the statute, court opinion, agency release, or official rule.
- The specific claim or date on our page that you believe is wrong or outdated.
- The date of the change, if a status moved from proposed to in force, withdrawn, or otherwise.
How we mark changes
We distinguish two kinds of change, and we handle both in the open.
- A correction fixes something we got wrong: a misstated fact, a wrong date, a misread of the primary source. Corrections are noted on the page with the date and the nature of the change.
- An update reflects a change in the world: a rule moves from proposed to in force, a court issues a new order, an agency withdraws guidance. Updates are timestamped, the prior status is acknowledged, and the Source File box at the bottom of the affected piece is reset to the new status.
Every tracked entry carries a visible Last checked date and a status label, so you can see when we last verified it against the primary source. Substantive changes are logged with the date they were made, so the version you are reading is dated and the history is not erased. Our full sourcing and review process is described in our Editorial Standards.
Coverage on AI Regulation News is informational and is not legal, tax, medical, or professional advice. We correct and update the record as a matter of editorial duty, not as a substitute for advice from a licensed professional in your jurisdiction.
Last reviewed: June 25, 2026.