“…Although user perspectives on sources have been studied (see Blankenburg, 1970;Maier, 2002Maier, , 2005Maier, , 2007Porlezza, Maier, & RussMohl, 2012), it is far more common to focus on corrections per se and their role for journalists and journalism (Barkin & Levy, 1983;Hindman, 2005;Joseph, 2011;Kampf & Daskal, 2014;Karlsson, 2010;Porlezza et al, 2012). From previous research we know that sources seem very sensitive towards even minor errors which affect their perception of news credibility (Maier, 2002;Porlezza et al, 2012) From empirical research on the content of online news we know that errors are published and are sometimes, but not always, corrected (Kampf & Daskal, 2014;Karlsson, 2010;Maier, 2007). We also know that online production conditions affect content, so that a journalistic text can be profoundly changed over time, including swapping headlines, factual errors and large ideological shifts amongst other things (Karlsson, 2012;Kutz & Herring, 2005;Salaverria, 2005).…”