Unless they specifically mention something? There's a difference between having a paper printout onscreen that is handed off and read much as a computer screen might be and having a character say, "Will you get me a paper copy of that report?" Is there s difference between dialog "inaccuracies" and shown "inaccuracies"?
Well, as I mentioned on the first page of the thread, I think Roddenberry basically approached ST as
Dragnet in space -- not a verbatim depiction of actual events, but a work of fiction dramatizing those events after the fact, and possibly altering details "to protect the innocent" or for dramatic effect. I'm rather taken with that idea and its potential ramifications. What if, as with
Dragnet, the various missions we saw the same characters undertaking were actually compiled from the mission logs of multiple different starships? I mean, realistically, no ship and crew are going to have two dozen life-threatening adventures in a single year -- most of their missions would probably be more routine, and there'd be weeks of travel time in between them. But a show dramatizing them could cherry-pick the most exciting incidents from all of Starfleet's ships and fictitiously assign them to the same cast of characters.
Heck, for all we know, Kirk and Spock and the rest could be composite characters, stand-ins for real-life counterparts. Well, the intro to Roddenberry's TMP novelization established that Kirk and Spock were real, but maybe their TV counterparts were embellished and the other characters around them might be unreal -- kinda like how Desilu's
The Untouchables featured a fictionalized version of the real Eliot Ness, but surrounded him with otherwise imaginary team members. Certainly some of the more disreputable characters we saw -- Matt Decker, Ronald Tracey, R.M. Merik, Tristan Adams, Harry Mudd, etc. -- might have had their names changed to protect the real parties' reputations. Other characters might have had their names changed because they wouldn't give permission for their real names to be used. Something like the Guardian of Forever, which would probably be highly classified if it existed, might have been completely fictionalized, or altered heavily enough from reality to obscure the facts. (Maybe the "real" version is the massive city with giant speaking statues in Ellison's first draft.) Or maybe it's like
Stargate SG-1's
Wormhole X-treme, a fictionalized version of a classified project created to discredit leaks about the real thing.
Of course, as a Trek novelist, I'm obligated to treat the events shown onscreen as true, but I find it entertaining to contemplate the alternative possibility that what we saw was just a fictionalization, and to imagine just how far removed from reality it might have been. It's a whole new way of looking at Trek that I never considered before, and it's fun to imagine.