Skip to main content

Community Notes

Community Notes

Community Notes

Add source-based context, careful questions, and correction suggestions without exposing private information.

How notes work

Community Notes are reviewed before publication. Use a pseudonym if you prefer, cite sources where possible, and do not include information about living people.

What a strong community note adds

  • A better source trail, not just stronger confidence language.
  • A missing date, place anchor, archive, institution, or wording limit that improves the page.
  • A correction path that editors can act on publicly.
  • A question that shows exactly where a public page may be oversimplifying, overreaching, or skipping context.

Good note examples

  • “This page names the town but not the county boundary change; here is the public map or archive guide that clarifies it.”
  • “This claim sounds broader than the source. The source supports a place connection, but not identity, descent, or legal status.”
  • “This institution name changed over time. The page should preserve both names and explain the date range.”
  • “This story may belong in Tales or community memory unless a source trail is added.”

What not to put in a note

  • Private contact details, living-person records, raw DNA data, family disputes, or unredacted screenshots.
  • Certainty claims without a source trail.
  • Requests to certify identity, ancestry, tribe, nationality, legal status, descent, or membership.
  • Harassment, status arguments, or pressure to publish a conclusion before review.

How editors can use a note

A strong note can become a page update, a source-review task, a correction, a claim-review label, or a held research lead. Notes are most useful when they make the next editorial action obvious.

Community Note

Add source-based context, a careful question, or a correction suggestion for editorial review.

Use a pseudonym if you want attribution. Do not include email addresses, phone numbers, addresses, private DNA data, or information about living people.

What this form adds

  • It gives readers a public-safe way to add context, dates, place anchors, wording cautions, and source leads without editing pages directly.
  • It moves useful community review into an editorial lane that can be checked, narrowed, and published responsibly.
  • It keeps the project from relying on private inboxes for corrections and context.

Useful Community Note examples

  • A public archive link that narrows a place, date, institution, route, or source holder.
  • A wording caution that explains what a page can support and what it should not imply yet.
  • A map, cemetery, church, school, newspaper, court, or directory clue that another reader can verify.
  • A privacy warning that helps remove living-person details before public reuse.

Hold or decline reasons

  • The note includes private contact details, living-person information, raw DNA data, or unredacted family records.
  • The note makes an identity, ancestry, legal-status, descent, tribe, Nation, or membership claim without a reviewable source trail.
  • The note argues from certainty or personal pressure instead of naming a source, page, sentence, or safer wording path.

Possible routing outcomes

A Community Note may become public context, a source-review task, a place-hub update, a correction lead, a fact-check request, or a held item if the public wording is not safe yet.

What remains open: A submission is a lead for editorial review, not an automatic publication or proof claim.

Published Community Notes

What this archive adds

  • It shows how readers improve pages in public by adding context, dates, place anchors, source leads, and wording cautions.
  • It makes editorial listening visible instead of hiding community review behind private inboxes.
  • It gives future readers a record of which questions, doubts, and source leads have already entered the project.

You should leave with a better sense of where a page may need context, what kinds of public-source additions are useful here, and how community review strengthens the site without turning every submission into proof.

No Community Notes have been published yet.

Scroll to Top