It isn't magic. It's traceable aggregation.
Where our news comes from, the rule that sits at the center, and how we keep ourselves honest. For a news product, this is the page that matters most.
Nothing publishes without ≥ 2 independent sources.
Single-source rumors never become an InkBytes page. Once a cluster has at least two distinct sources agreeing it's a story, we synthesize one balanced account — and only then.
Factuality, in the open.
Corroborated across many independent outlets; claims trace cleanly to source.
Still developing — outlets diverge on specifics; we flag what isn't settled.
Thin or disputed sourcing. Rarely published; never from a single source.
Where our information comes from
We aggregate and synthesize public reporting from established outlets across English and Spanish, and we link to every source on each page. We do not do original reporting — and we say so.
The ≥ 2-source rule
No page is published from a single source. If only one outlet has a story, we wait until it is independently corroborated. This is the single most important safeguard against rumor and error.
How we avoid making things up
Synthesis is constrained to the clustered source articles — a quality-assurance pass drops any claim that can't be tied back to a source before a page goes live. The corpus assistant answers only from published, cited events.
Balanced, not slant-washed
We preserve source diversity and synthesize a balanced account rather than picking a side. There is no engagement-optimizing feed deciding what you should see.
No stale news resurfacing
Strict freshness windows keep archived or stale content from floating back to the top as if it were new.
Accountability in the open
Errors are corrected openly and noted on the page. If you spot something wrong, tell us — corrections are part of the product, not an embarrassment to hide.
What we can't do (yet)
Synthesis can lag a breaking event, and coverage depends on which outlets we harvest. We list our source outlets and are honest about the edges of our coverage.
Languages & regions
The current vertical is LATAM bilingual — Dominican Republic, Mexico, Colombia, Argentina and more — plus global English business and technology coverage. Spanish is first-class, not a machine translation.
Found an error? Report a correction.
We fix mistakes in the open. Send the page and what's wrong, and we'll note the correction on the event itself. Report a correction →
Trust you can check.
Open any page, follow any claim to its source, and see the factuality score for yourself.
Start reading — $9/mo