Loading...
Mythos Atlas is maintained by Elizabeth Stein. If you need to report a factual issue, ask about sources, raise a privacy request, or discuss licensing and project feedback, use the official project links below.
The fastest path is usually a repository issue with the page URL, the problem you found, and the change you want reviewed. That makes it easier to verify mythology details against cited material and to track technical fixes in one visible place.
Mythos Atlas is an editorial and technical project at the same time, so the most useful requests tend to be specific. If you are reporting a factual issue, include the exact statement that looks wrong and the source tradition it belongs to. If you are reporting a product issue, include the route, browser, and the user action that triggered the bug.
Requests tied to source accuracy, licensing, accessibility, privacy concerns, and broken functionality are the highest-signal reports because they directly affect trust in the encyclopedia. Clear reports make it much easier to compare cited material, reproduce UI issues, and decide whether a fix belongs in content, design, or the data layer.
For general project feedback, open-source questions, and code discussions, start with the public repository.
Visit the Mythos Atlas repositoryIf you spot a factual error, a broken source link, missing context, or a mythology attribution issue, open an issue with the page URL and the correction you want reviewed.
Report a content or source issueFor privacy-policy questions, terms clarification, or requests related to local data handling and analytics consent, use the same issue tracker and clearly mark the request as privacy or legal.
The current policies are documented on the Privacy Policy and Terms of Service pages.
Include the page URL, the issue you found, and the requested change.
For source questions, include the citation or reference you want compared.
For technical bugs, include device, browser, and any console or UI errors.
For licensing or collaboration questions, include the intended use case so the request can be reviewed with the right context.
Mythos Atlas is a curated project, not a staffed support desk, so response times vary. Reports that include page URLs, screenshots, citations, or reproducible steps are easier to review than general complaints because they can be checked against the live route and the underlying source notes immediately.
If your request touches privacy, legal use, or attribution, point to the relevant policy section and explain the desired outcome. If your request is about a mythological interpretation, note whether you are challenging a factual claim, a translation choice, or an editorial summary. Those distinctions keep review focused and make the resulting changes more accurate.