Corrections Policy
Rings.Jewelry aims to publish jewelry education that is accurate, useful, clear, and practical for readers making real decisions about rings, diamonds, gemstones, settings, metals, insurance, appraisals, care, repair, resale, and ownership.
If something on our site is outdated, unclear, incomplete, or incorrect, we want to know. This corrections policy explains how readers, experts, brands, and industry professionals can report issues and how Rings.Jewelry may review and update content.
Jewelry guidance should be corrected when better information is needed.
Help us improve Rings.Jewelry by reporting factual errors, outdated details, unclear explanations, missing context, broken links, or important jewelry-specific updates.
Our Approach to Corrections
Rings.Jewelry takes corrections seriously because jewelry advice can affect expensive, emotional, and long-term decisions. A small detail about a setting, metal, appraisal, insurance document, repair warning, or resale expectation can matter to a reader.
When we receive a relevant correction request, we may review the page, check the claim, update wording, clarify context, add missing detail, adjust links, or improve the explanation where appropriate.
What We May Correct or Update
Corrections are not limited to obvious factual mistakes. Sometimes a page needs better wording, stronger context, clearer limitations, or a more careful explanation of jewelry trade-offs.
Factual Issues
Incorrect or outdated statements about materials, settings, terminology, maintenance, appraisals, insurance, resale, or jewelry ownership.
Unclear Wording
Explanations that may confuse readers, oversimplify a topic, or make a jewelry choice sound more universal than it really is.
Missing Context
Situations where readers need more detail about durability, repair needs, stone security, documents, professional inspection, or personal fit.
Outdated Information
Content affected by changes in market conditions, brand policies, insurance practices, product standards, terminology, or reader expectations.
Broken Links or Formatting
Incorrect URLs, broken internal links, formatting problems, missing sections, or page details that reduce usefulness.
Overly Broad Claims
Statements that need more nuance because jewelry decisions often depend on lifestyle, budget, condition, design, documentation, or professional evaluation.
What to Include in a Correction Request
A clear correction message helps us review the issue faster. You do not need to write a long formal report, but the more specific you are, the easier it is to evaluate the request.
- Page URL: include the exact Rings.Jewelry page where you noticed the issue.
- Specific location: mention the heading, paragraph, sentence, image, link, or FAQ item involved.
- Correction details: explain what you believe is inaccurate, outdated, unclear, incomplete, or misleading.
- Suggested improvement: tell us what wording, context, or detail would make the page more accurate or useful.
- Source or expertise: include a reliable source, professional explanation, documentation, or relevant expertise if available.
- Your role: if relevant, mention whether you are a jeweler, gemologist, appraiser, insurer, repair specialist, brand representative, reader, or other professional.
Email subject suggestion
Use the subject line “Correction Request” and send the details to info@rings.jewelry.
How We Review Correction Requests
Submitting a correction request does not guarantee that a change will be made. Rings.Jewelry may review the issue editorially and decide whether the content needs correction, clarification, expansion, or no change.
We may review
- the page and section mentioned;
- the wording and context;
- available sources or documentation;
- professional relevance;
- whether the issue affects reader understanding;
- whether a broader update is needed.
We may decline requests that are
- purely promotional;
- not relevant to the page;
- unsupported by useful detail;
- based only on personal preference;
- intended mainly for link placement;
- unrelated to jewelry accuracy or reader value.
Types of Updates We May Make
Not every update is a major correction. Some changes are small refinements that make a page clearer, more useful, more accurate, or easier to understand.
- Factual correction: fixing a statement that is incorrect, outdated, or misleading.
- Clarification: adding nuance when a topic depends on condition, lifestyle, budget, design, material, or professional evaluation.
- Context expansion: adding practical details about care, repair, insurance, documentation, resale, or daily wear.
- Terminology improvement: making jewelry language clearer, more precise, or more useful for readers.
- Link update: fixing broken links, improving internal links, or updating references to related Rings.Jewelry pages.
- Structural improvement: reorganizing a section, adding FAQ, improving headings, or making the answer easier to find.
Reader Feedback and Editorial Improvements
Some messages are not corrections in the strict sense, but they can still help us improve a page. If a guide is confusing, missing a common buyer question, or does not explain a practical jewelry concern clearly enough, we may use that feedback to improve the article.
Useful reader feedback
Questions readers still have after reading a guide, unclear explanations, missing comparison points, or practical concerns not addressed on the page.
Editorial improvements
Better examples, clearer headings, stronger FAQ answers, improved buyer checklists, more practical warnings, or more precise jewelry terminology.
Professional and Industry Input
We welcome thoughtful input from jewelry professionals, including jewelers, gemologists, appraisers, insurers, repair specialists, designers, resale advisors, and lost ring recovery experts.
Professional input is most helpful when it is specific, practical, and connected to reader value. We are more likely to consider a correction when it explains why the current wording may cause confusion or what detail would make the page more accurate.
Professional input should be transparent
If you are contacting us on behalf of a brand, store, service, product, or commercial interest, please disclose that relationship in your message.
Important Limitations
Rings.Jewelry provides educational content. We do not appraise individual pieces online, guarantee resale values, guarantee insurance outcomes, or replace direct professional inspection by a qualified jeweler, appraiser, insurer, gemologist, or repair specialist.
- Individual jewelry evaluation: specific rings, diamonds, gemstones, and repairs often require in-person professional inspection.
- Insurance details: coverage depends on the policy, insurer, documentation, exclusions, and claim situation.
- Resale value: market value depends on condition, demand, documentation, brand, materials, and professional assessment.
- Repair decisions: stone security, prong wear, metal fatigue, resizing risk, and structural issues should be reviewed by a qualified professional.
Report a Correction to Rings.Jewelry
To report an error, outdated detail, unclear explanation, missing context, broken link, or editorial issue, email Rings.Jewelry with the page URL and correction details.
Email: info@rings.jewelry
FAQ
How do I report a correction to Rings.Jewelry?
Email info@rings.jewelry with the subject line “Correction Request,” include the page URL, the specific section or sentence, and explain what should be corrected or clarified.
What kinds of corrections does Rings.Jewelry review?
Rings.Jewelry may review factual errors, outdated information, unclear wording, missing context, broken links, formatting issues, and overly broad jewelry claims that need more nuance.
Does Rings.Jewelry guarantee every correction request will be accepted?
No. Submitting a correction request does not guarantee a change. Rings.Jewelry may review the issue and decide whether a correction, clarification, expansion, or no change is appropriate.
Can jewelry professionals submit corrections?
Yes. Jewelers, gemologists, appraisers, insurers, repair specialists, designers, resale advisors, recovery specialists, and other industry professionals can submit specific and relevant correction notes.
What should I include in a correction request?
Include the page URL, exact section or sentence, correction details, suggested improvement, reliable source or professional explanation if available, and your role if relevant.
Does Rings.Jewelry update old articles?
Yes. Rings.Jewelry may update articles to improve accuracy, clarify wording, add context, fix links, improve structure, or reflect better jewelry guidance.
Can I request a correction for a product or brand mention?
Yes, but the request should be specific, factual, and relevant to reader understanding. Promotional requests or link-building requests may be declined.
Is Rings.Jewelry a substitute for a jeweler or appraiser?
No. Rings.Jewelry provides educational content and does not replace direct professional inspection, appraisal, insurance advice, or repair evaluation.