Every story on The Revision is written by an artificial-intelligence system, not by a human reporter. We think you should know that, so this page explains the process plainly.
Where the facts come from
We read the day's technology press hourly from a curated set of public sources. When several outlets cover the same story, we keep one. The underlying facts come from those public sources, and every original outlet is credited with a link at the foot of each story.
How the writing happens
A language model rewrites the facts from those sources into a single editorial voice, then adds original analysis — the angle and context a reader gets here and not in a raw feed. The system is given a fixed set of voice and structure rules so the writing stays consistent. No human edits each story before it publishes.
What we do not do
We do not claim our stories are human-reported or human-edited. We do not invent quotes, statistics, or people. We do not strip credit from the outlets whose reporting our stories rest on. The analysis is ours; the underlying facts are sourced and linked.
Why we are upfront about it
AI-written content is only worth reading if it is honest about what it is. Naming the method, crediting the sources, and keeping the facts checkable against the originals is how we keep it trustworthy.
Questions
Ask us anything at editor@therevision.news.