What Digital Mind News Is

Digital Mind News is an AI-generated news publication. Articles are drafted and published automatically by an automated newsroom system, then reviewed by a human editor after they go live. The editor can refine phrasing, flag a factual slip, or rewrite the editor’s brief at the top with their own framing instead of the AI’s draft. We are transparent about this, it is the product, not a secret.

What We Do

Each day our system reads reporting from roughly 65 established technology news sources — including trade publications, wire services, company announcements, and research institutions — and synthesizes that reporting into concise articles on a single topic. New articles cite their original sources at the bottom of the page. If you want first-hand sourcing, follow those links; that is where the reporting lives.

The value we offer is synthesis: instead of reading ten articles from ten outlets covering the same story with overlapping facts, you read one article that combines the relevant information and points you to the primary sources.

Note on older articles: articles published before April 2026 were produced under an earlier version of the pipeline that did not render the sources block publicly. The underlying source data still drove those articles, but is not displayed on the page. All articles published after April 2026 include the full sources block.

What We Do Not Do

  • We do not conduct original reporting.
  • We do not interview sources.
  • We do not break news.
  • We do not write opinion or editorial commentary.
  • We do not employ human journalists; the byline on our articles reflects our automated newsroom, not individual people.

Editorial Standards

Our system is built to prioritize factual accuracy and clear attribution. New articles cite the original sources they were synthesized from. We do not fabricate quotes, statistics, or events. When our sources disagree, we attempt to reflect that uncertainty rather than pick a side.

AI systems can still make mistakes. We take corrections seriously — see the Contact page below to report one.

Coverage Areas

  • AI research, new models, capabilities, benchmarks
  • AI agents, autonomous systems, orchestration frameworks, multi-agent setups
  • SGI (super general intelligence), capability research, scaling laws, alignment
  • Robotics, embodied AI, humanoid platforms, manipulation, perception
  • AI tools, coding assistants, image and video generation, productivity software
  • Industries, AI deployed in enterprise, healthcare, banking, and education
  • Companies, the firms building and deploying AI: OpenAI, Google, Microsoft, NVIDIA, Apple, Amazon, and the broader startup ecosystem
  • Cybersecurity, threat reporting, vulnerabilities, defensive guidance
  • Ethics & society, regulation, safety research, societal implications
  • Knowledge Library, plain-language explainers on how AI actually works, organised by topic

Corrections & Contact

To report an inaccuracy, suggest a correction, or ask a question about our methodology, email contact@digitalmindnews.com or use the contact form. We review corrections promptly.

The Humans Behind the Newsroom

The bylines on our articles are automated — the people who keep this newsroom running are not. Digital Mind News is synthesis-by-machine, but the service around that machine is operated by humans:

  • We read what we publish, after we publish it. Articles go live automatically as soon as the pipeline finishes drafting them. A human editor reviews each piece after publication, sometimes correcting a phrasing, sharpening the lede, flagging a factual slip, or rewriting the editor’s brief at the top with their own framing instead of the AI’s draft. The brief above any given article, especially when it reads more pointedly than the body, is usually the human voice rather than the pipeline’s. If you spot something the pipeline got wrong before we do, send a correction (link below) and we will fix it.
  • We maintain and improve the code. The pipeline that powers this site is under active development — source selection, synthesis prompts, attribution handling, deduplication, editorial rules. When something breaks or drifts, a person fixes it.
  • We monitor the site in real time. Uptime, error rates, what readers look at, what sources we lean on too much or too little, which topics need more or less coverage — a human keeps an eye on all of it.
  • We take corrections personally. Reports sent to contact@digitalmindnews.com are read by a person and acted on.

The point of the synthesis is simple: you should not need to open ten tabs to understand one story. Our job on the human side is to make sure that shortcut stays worth taking — accurate, attributed, and honest about what it is.

Ownership & Operations

Digital Mind News is operated by Michał Gołębiowski as an independent project. It is not affiliated with any of the companies or publications it covers.