> Anyone affiliated with the project can email me privately and I'll add notes where appropriate.
This is the principal difference between traditional journalism and modern blogging.
In a real newspaper, a blog post like this would have been followed by "Mismatch media did not respond to a request for comment", where the request for comment was made in good faith (AKA not 30 seconds before hitting "publish. All claims would have been properly sourced and have included annotations like "according to three former employees of Mismatch, who spoke to us on the condition of anonymity as they're contractually forbidden from discussing the project".
There's a lot of good that modern blogging can do in the world, the fact that anybody can publish a blog means that important stories aren't subject to gatekeeping, but it's a real shame that this transition means losing the journalistic standards that we historically have had.
My dude, you're the one who wrote this post (presumably) so you're the one who should be reaching out to the relevant parties to seek out information, not the other way around...