If a participant overstates GRA approval, you should report the claim through the official correction, support, claims-discipline, or integrity pathway.
Overstatement may appear in LinkedIn posts, websites, pitch decks, sponsorship materials, investor decks, insurance materials, procurement submissions, grant applications, press releases, email signatures, event pages, public bios, proposals, or meeting statements.
Your report should include the claim, where it appeared, who made it if known, date, screenshots or links if available, and why the claim appears inaccurate.
GRA may request correction, clarification, removal, revised language, public correction, access restriction, role review, good-standing review, suspension, or termination depending on severity.
Many overclaims can be corrected quickly if they are accidental. Serious or repeated overclaims may require claims-discipline action because they can damage trust, mislead financial-services actors, confuse public authorities, create procurement risk, or imply false endorsement.
The safest response is fast correction. The official record must control the public claim.