We ask that question because the Post's online corrections page hasn't been updated in several weeks. Its last correction entry is from a June 21 story even though the paper has run at least 13 corrections since then, according to a search we did in Factiva. For example, it ran this correction on June 23:
A June 18 op-ed by Pavel Litvinov, "No American 'Gulag,' " incorrectly referred to South Korea instead of North Korea in citing four countries with poor human rights records.
And this on July 10:
A July 3 Book World review of Vindication: A Life of Mary Wollstonecraft incorrectly identified Mary Shelley as the daughter of Percy Bysshe Shelley. She was his wife.
Yet the online page has remained static for weeks. Part of this is likely due to the recent redesign of the site, which put the corrections on a different page. The Post has historically done a good job of posting corrections online and making them visible within the story itself. But it looks like someone dropped the ball.
UPDATED: We sent a couple of emails and the page was updated as of about 10:30 p.m. EST tonight.