AI News Daily covers artificial intelligence: new technology, the legal fights it sparks, and the rules being written around it. We also use AI to help produce this site. We think that’s only fair to say plainly, so here is exactly how it works.
Where our stories come from
Our system continuously monitors a curated list of sources — research repositories, technology publications, legal and policy outlets, and official announcements. Incoming items are screened for relevance and newsworthiness, duplicate coverage of the same event is collapsed, and the most significant stories are selected for coverage each day.
How articles are written
Articles are drafted with the aid of AI language models, working from the original source material. Our drafting rules are strict: write in original wording rather than reproducing the source, attribute factual claims, keep quotes short and clearly credited, and never invent facts, quotes, or numbers. When a detail can’t be verified from the source, it is left out.
A human editor reviews every article before it is published. Nothing goes live automatically unless we have explicitly marked a source as trusted; the default is human approval, and editors can revise or reject any draft. Every article links to the original reporting — we encourage you to read the source.
How images are made
Most article images are generated with AI image models, and some are licensed stock photography. Whenever an image is AI-generated, we label it as such directly beneath the image — including the model that produced it. Stock photos carry their photographer credit. We never present AI-generated imagery as a photograph of a real event or person.
Corrections
AI systems make mistakes, and so do editors. If we learn an article is inaccurate, we correct or unpublish it. The linked original source is always the authoritative record for the underlying facts.
Why we work this way
AI moves faster than any small newsroom can. Using AI to draft — with humans deciding what gets covered and what gets published — lets us deliver broad, timely, and consistent coverage while staying honest about how it is produced. The technology writes the first draft; the judgment stays human.
Questions about our process? See the About page or start with our latest coverage.