Last updated: June 2026
Editorial Standard
Echoes of History Past publishes history-focused articles, videos, and related materials for education, commentary, and discovery. The standard is to distinguish documented fact, mainstream historical interpretation, disputed evidence, and informed speculation.
AI Assistance
Some content may be drafted, structured, summarized, or expanded with AI assistance. AI output is not treated as a source. Historical claims should be checked against human-readable sources, primary material where available, and reputable secondary references before publication.
Corrections
When a factual error is identified, the article or page should be corrected promptly. Material corrections should preserve the historical record of the change when appropriate, especially if the error affected names, dates, places, numbers, attribution, legal rights, or the meaning of an event.
What to Send
Send correction requests to support@echoesofhistorypast.com or through the contact page. Include the page URL, the exact passage, the proposed correction, and a source or explanation. Screenshots are helpful when the issue appears in video, social media, or generated snippets.
Sourcing
- Article-level public source lists are being expanded across the archive. Where a post does not yet include a formal bibliography, it should not be treated as a sole academic source.
- Research links and reading notes are starting points, not proof that every claim has a visible citation on the page.
- Images should be legally usable, properly credited where required, and described accurately in alternative text when the image carries meaning.
- Claims about living people, recent events, controversial subjects, or contested evidence require extra care.
- AI-generated summaries should not invent citations, titles, quotes, dates, or archive references.
Commercial and User Trust
Store, subscription, newsletter, account, privacy, and AI-companion language should be clear, truthful, and consistent with the site's Terms and Privacy Policy. If a feature changes how user data, billing, fulfillment, or AI processing works, public disclosures should be reviewed.