Corrections
The point of this page is to let you see what we've changed. A site willing to publish its own mistakes, versus one that's forever "always right" — you can judge which deserves more trust. In reverse chronological order below.
2026-06 · Hard-coded spot fees changed to a range, noting the official page as the source of truth
The first version of a few articles and tool notes wrote Binance's spot trading fee as a fixed "0.1%." As a reference for the standard tier that's fine, but writing it as a number set in stone isn't rigorous: the actual fee changes with VIP level, whether you pay with BNB, and periodic promotions. We've standardized the wording to "reference fee about 0.1%, see what Binance shows in real time (2026-06)," and broken out BNB discount as a separate option in the fee calculator, to avoid giving the impression the fee is fixed at exactly that.
2026-06 · "Halving" wording revised to avoid it being read as the price "halving"
An early draft of the Bitcoin halving piece had one passage that wasn't clear enough and could let readers conflate "halving" with the price falling 50%. They're two different things: the halving means the new-coin reward miners get per block is cut in half (a supply-side change in output), with no direct causal link to whether the price rises or falls short-term. We rewrote the relevant paragraphs to spell out that the halving is not a price cut, and separated the mechanism from price expectations in the text, to prevent confusion.
2026-06 · Added a scope note to the position calculator (excludes fees and leverage)
At launch, the position calculator gave only a spot position size backed out from a "fixed loss per trade," but didn't make its boundaries clear in the results area. Some readers assumed the figure already factored in fees, slippage, and the liquidation line under leverage — it doesn't. We added an explicit note: the result is a spot illustration excluding fees/slippage; with leverage, the capital used is magnified and the liquidation line is calculated separately, so it can't be applied directly. The calculation logic itself is unchanged — we just spelled out where the figure does and doesn't apply.
How to report an error to us
If you find a factual error, an out-of-date number or a dead link in any article, write to [email protected], saying which article, which paragraph, and what you think the correct version is — a source is even better. Once verified, we'll correct it and add it to this list. See the contact page.