I've greatly enjoyed finding "real" records, and fossicking around in various Records Offices, over the year - and I also enjoy using "Ancestry", and of course like most of us here, am well aware that many people really don't fret themselves to check sources, or even apply common sense, sometimes.
If they wish to make errors, fair enough. If I choose to try and provide the correct information, fair enough. I don't "have" to accept their errors, and they do not have to accept my "corrections". I wouldn't offer them up unless I was absolutely certain, and had proof...
BUT.... it was via an online source that I was given a massive clue to where a missing Anderson ancestor of my OH , with his mother, had emerged from. (Hev: I'm sure they won't be "yours") Names had been changed ( to protect the guilty), and people had moved around the country for nearly half a century, under a false family name. Unearthing the change of names provided myself and another, completely different family, who had "mislaid" a male ancestor at the same time. The two and child had hooked up under another name, and I was given a clue ("It might be relevant - same christian names for child, age and place of birth given online....") and we found the male concerned was actually buried under his original surname, so at least one of his sons knew it!
That helped a lot, with a very difficult line. But I couldn't accept it until I'd gone thoroughly through each stage, and traced all the people involved in both chronological directions, to make a true record.
Online sources are valuable, especially for those not able to visit record offices in person - and especially for us all, during the long lockdown. But I can not get highly worked up over other peoples' errors, nor their refusal to accept advice, or their apparent obsession with gathering huge numbers of people to their trees. (I've actually had a lot of fun moving along fraternal lines in different generations, when I'd nothing much else to do)
I think "LeedsHipPriest69" might relax a little.