This would seem to define away many things we generally consider to be facts. Mathematic truths, laws of logic, historical events, etc... I think your definition is a bit anemic.
No not really if you consider my response from my first post below.
The bolded things above are subject to the bracketed things below.
The distinction is that a fact is something exists in your physical reality (if it doesn't then the presentation of information regarding that fact is key)
I'm referring to my ethical proposition. IF "stealing is wrong" is true then it is also a fact. All ethical truths are facts.
A fact applied to a context or condition as previously stated. If I stole from a weathly man upon first pleading with him for charity to feed my kids,( stolen in light of his refusal to give) I would have stolen from him, but in that context I wouldn't deem it wrong, thus your statement about stealing being wrong is subject to conditions and context. IMO.
It's generally understood that knowledge is justified, true belief. Hence all knowledge is also belief. If you know something you also believe it and you cannot know something unless you believe that it's true.
Knowledge is knowledge, its basis is the presentation of information, and whether it is deemed to be factual, which as stated previously, are things that exist in physical reality. This forms the basis of belief, and is the justification.
You don't think there's an ethical demand to believe the facts?
As I said before, in the light of knowledge the demand is self evident, thus a belief is 'formed'.