This edition: how tokenization rails get stress-tested in 2026. Editorial updates
Editorial Desk

Contact The Blockchain Examiner

How to reach The Blockchain Examiner editorial desk for tips, corrections, and reader questions.

Editorial composition referencing correspondence

The editorial desk welcomes reader questions, corrections, and tips. Correspondence is handled by the desk rather than routed to individual contributors.

This page describes how to reach the publication, what kinds of correspondence we respond to, and what readers should expect in terms of timing.

Corrections

If you spot a factual error in a published item, please use the editorial contact route below. Include the page URL, the specific text you believe is incorrect, and any primary source supporting your point.

Corrections that materially change the meaning of a piece are logged in the Changelog. Minor edits (formatting, typos, broken internal links) are applied without a separate log entry.

Tips

Tips about blockchain projects, regulatory developments, infrastructure releases, or relevant research are welcome. We do not pay for tips. We do not run paid placement, sponsored content, or covert advertorial.

Tips are treated confidentially. We assess every tip against publicly verifiable sources before deciding whether to cover it.

Press releases

We receive a high volume of press releases. We do not republish them verbatim. Where a press release contains material worth covering, we draft a short market note based on the announcement and the surrounding context.

Requests for direct republication, paid placement, or affiliate content will not be answered.

How to reach the desk

Reader correspondence can be sent to the editorial desk by email. Specific contact details are kept simple deliberately, and we do not publish phone numbers or instant-messaging handles.

Editorial email: editor [at] theblockchainexaminer [dot] com

Response times

We aim to acknowledge correspondence promptly during normal working weeks. Detailed responses can take longer for corrections that require source verification. Tips that lead to coverage are usually published without further correspondence with the tipster, unless a follow-up is genuinely material.