SevenTnewS

How we produce our articles

Many articles on SevenTnewS carry an “AI-assisted” badge next to the byline. This page explains exactly what that means: which parts of the pipeline are automated, what a human actually checks before an article goes live, and what happens when we get something wrong.

The pipeline, step by step

  1. Sourcing. We monitor a network of primary sources — company blogs, research publications, filings, and specialized outlets — for developments in AI and technology.
  2. Drafting. A first draft is generated by an AI model working from those sources, following an editorial style guide (headline discipline, no unverifiable superlatives, mandatory sourcing of attributed claims).
  3. Human review. Before publication, an editor checks names and titles of people quoted, dates and years referenced, the correct category, and that key figures match the linked source. Articles that fail this check are held back, not published.
  4. Post-publication corrections. When a reader or an editor identifies an error after publication, the article is corrected as soon as possible and the publication date is left untouched — only the update timestamp changes, and only when the correction happened after the original publication.

What “AI-assisted” does and doesn't mean

It means a model produced the first draft from real source material, and a human reviewed it before it went live. It does not mean the article was published without anyone reading it, and it does not mean the underlying facts are AI-generated — sources are always real and, where an article cites a claim, we link to that source directly.

Reporting a correction

Spotted an error, an outdated figure, or a broken link? Tell us on our Contact page and we will review it — corrections are our responsibility, not an afterthought.