Corrections Policy

1. Our Commitment to Accuracy

At Express Highs, we take the accuracy of our published content seriously. Our blog covers legal highs, research chemicals, cannabinoids, CBD, cannabis, and psychedelics — subjects where incorrect information about dosage, safety, legality, or effects can have real consequences for our readers. We hold ourselves to a high editorial standard and, when we fall short, we correct the record promptly, transparently, and without hesitation.

This policy explains the types of errors we correct, how we correct them, and how readers can report a mistake they have found.


2. Scope

This policy applies to all editorial content published on blog.expresshighs.com, including but not limited to:

  • Substance guides and explainers (e.g. HHC, HHCP, LSD analogues, magic truffles)
  • Dosage and usage articles
  • Buyer’s guides and product comparisons
  • Legal status and regulatory updates
  • CBD and cannabis news articles
  • Research chemical profiles
  • All translated versions of the above across our supported languages

3. Types of Errors We Correct

Factual Errors — Any demonstrably incorrect statement of fact. This includes wrong dosage figures, incorrect descriptions of a substance’s pharmacological effects, misattributed research findings, or inaccurate product specifications.

Legal Status Errors — Given that cannabis, cannabinoid, and research chemical laws change frequently across European and international jurisdictions, we treat outdated or incorrect legal information as a priority correction. A reader acting on wrong legal information faces serious consequences, and we recognise that responsibility.

Safety and Health Errors — Any content that understates risks, omits relevant warnings, or conflicts with current scientific or medical understanding of a substance’s safety profile is corrected immediately and treated as urgent.

Outdated Information — Information that was accurate at time of publication but has since been superseded by new legislation, updated research, product discontinuation, or regulatory rulings. These are updated with a clear notation of when the update was made.

Source and Attribution Errors — Incorrectly attributed quotes, misrepresented study findings, broken citations, or missing references to original sources.

Translation Errors — Errors introduced during translation into any of our supported languages, particularly where the mistranslation affects the meaning of safety, dosage, or legal content.

Typographical Errors — Significant spelling or grammatical errors that alter the meaning of a sentence are corrected silently. Minor typos that do not affect meaning may be corrected without notation.


4. What We Do Not Alter

We do not alter published articles to remove content for reputational, commercial, or competitive reasons. We do not make substantive changes to articles without disclosure. We do not backdate corrections or remove correction notices once applied. Historical content is preserved accurately; if a piece is significantly outdated but of archival value, it is labelled accordingly rather than quietly rewritten.


5. Corrections Process

Step 1 — Report Received A correction request is submitted by a reader, contributor, or member of our editorial team. All submissions are logged with a timestamp.

Step 2 — Editorial Review Our editorial team assesses the report. For standard factual errors, review is completed within seven business days. For safety-critical errors — including incorrect dosage information, inaccurate risk profiles, or wrong legal status — review is escalated and completed within 24 to 48 hours.

Step 3 — Verification The claim is checked against reliable, primary sources including peer-reviewed literature, official regulatory announcements, manufacturer documentation, and established harm-reduction resources.

Step 4 — Correction Applied If the error is confirmed, the article is updated. The nature and extent of the correction determines how it is disclosed (see Section 6 below).

Step 5 — Reporter Notified Where the person who submitted the report provided contact details, we notify them that the correction has been applied.


6. How Corrections Are Disclosed

We apply corrections transparently according to the following framework:

Minor Corrections — Small factual errors, broken links, or typographical mistakes that do not materially affect the meaning of the article are corrected in the text without a formal notice, but are logged internally.

Moderate Corrections — Errors that affect a specific claim, figure, or piece of data within an article are corrected in the text and accompanied by a brief correction notice placed at the foot of the article. The notice states what was changed and the date the correction was made. Example:

Correction — 26 April 2026: An earlier version of this article stated the standard starting dose of 9H-HHC as 15mg. This has been updated to 10mg to reflect current guidance. We regret the error.

Major Corrections — Errors that significantly alter the meaning, conclusions, or safety guidance of an article are disclosed with a prominent correction notice placed at the top of the article as well as the foot. The original erroneous content is described clearly so readers who encountered the article before correction understand what changed.

Article Retraction — In exceptional circumstances where an article is so substantially inaccurate that correction would require a complete rewrite, or where the original publication caused harm, the article may be retracted. A retraction notice is published in its place explaining why the article was removed. The URL is preserved so the retraction notice remains accessible.


7. How to Report an Error

If you have found an error in any article on this blog, please contact us using the details below. The more information you provide, the faster we can act.

Contact form Subject line: “Correction Request – [Article Title]”

Please include:

  • The full URL of the article
  • The specific passage, figure, or claim you believe is incorrect
  • What you believe the correct information to be
  • A source or reference supporting your correction, where possible

For urgent safety-related errors, please use:

Subject line: “URGENT CORRECTION – [Article Title]”

These are reviewed within 24 hours, seven days a week.


8. Corrections Submitted in Bad Faith

We reserve the right to decline correction requests that are submitted with the intent to suppress accurate harm-reduction information, to remove legitimate safety warnings, or to alter content for competitive or commercial benefit. All correction requests are evaluated solely on the basis of factual accuracy.


9. Responsibility for Translated Content

Each language version of the Express Highs Blog is subject to this same corrections policy. Translation errors that alter the meaning of safety, dosage, or legal content are treated as priority corrections equivalent to the original-language standards described above. Readers who identify errors in any translated version are encouraged to report them using the same contact channels.


10. Policy Review

This Corrections Policy is reviewed every six months or following any significant change to our editorial processes or content output. The current version is always available at:


Express Highs — Accuracy matters. When we get it wrong, we say so.