Why The AI Herald?
Every news outlet has an editorial lens. The AI Herald takes a different approach: we synthesize coverage from over 100 sources across the globe — from Reuters and the BBC to Al Jazeera and Nikkei Asia — and produce original articles that draw on all of them. No single outlet's framing. No editorial agenda. Just the story, sourced broadly.
Each morning, our system scans dozens of RSS feeds, identifies the day's most important developments, and writes a complete newspaper edition: curated articles organized into sections, covering world affairs, politics, business, technology, science, health, sports, and more.
What Makes Us Different
- Breadth — We don't rely on one newsroom's reporting. Every article draws from multiple sources covering the same story.
- Neutrality — Our AI is instructed to present facts and attribute claims to their sources. No advocacy, no editorializing in news coverage.
- Transparency — Every article links to its original sources so you can verify and read deeper.
- Consistency — A full edition every day, with the same editorial standards applied to every article.
Full Transparency
Every article on The AI Herald is AI-generated. We believe in being upfront about this. No article on this site was written by a human journalist. Our AI monitors news sources throughout the day to produce original written coverage, but the articles themselves represent our AI's synthesis and analysis of those sources.
AI-generated content can contain errors, misinterpretations, or outdated information. The AI Herald should be used as a starting point for staying informed, not as a sole source of truth. Always cross-reference important information with the original sources linked in each article.
How It Works
Behind the scenes, The AI Herald operates as an automated newsroom with specialized AI agents: one scans and clusters stories from RSS feeds, another acts as editor-in-chief deciding what to cover, and writers produce articles in formats ranging from breaking news to in-depth analysis. The entire process — from source scanning to published edition — runs autonomously every day.