AI moves fast. Too fast. And when it moves that fast, misinformation spreads faster than facts.
That’s why we’re building the Latest AI News & Updates category as a space for real journalism. Keep it free from hype, clickbait, and unverified rumors presented as news. Just journalists, researchers, and analysts sharing what actually happened in AI what changed, why it matters, and what’s next.
When you write for this category, you’re part of something different. You’re reporting to people who care about accuracy over sensationalism. Your stories get to readers who want to understand AI developments, not be tricked by them.
We publish news that’s been checked. Stories that make sense. Reporting that respects the reader’s intelligence.
If you cover AI developments with real insight and refuse to bullshit your audience, we want your work here. That’s the category we’re building.
Ready to publish real journalism? Let’s talk.
WHY JOURNALISTS CHOOSE THIS CATEGORY
You reach readers who actually want the truth
Not everyone who clicks on AI news actually cares about what happened. But the people reading this category do. They’re here for real information, not viral hype. Your audience will be people who value what you actually have to say.
That matters. Writing for people who care is different than writing for clicks.
Your credibility matters more than clicks
In a space full of fake news and sensationalism, being the person who tells the truth builds real authority. Write here, and you’re establishing yourself as someone your audience can trust. That reputation compounds over time.
You become the journalist people recommend. The one people share. The one people actually read carefully.
You’re not competing with noise
Avoid clickbait headlines, unverified rumors, and sensationalism that overshadows real reporting.When you publish AI news here, it’s because it actually matters, and your work won’t be buried under garbage.
Your work gets to the people who want to read it.
Your stories stay relevant
Real news doesn’t expire. If you report accurately on AI developments, your articles continue to be useful and discoverable long after publication. People link to them. People share them. Not because they’re viral—because they’re useful.
A story about what actually changed in AI stays useful for months or years.
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WHAT WE PUBLISH: LATEST AI NEWS & UPDATES
We cover real developments in AI. Here’s what we’re looking for:
Model releases and announcements
When OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, or other teams release new models, explain what changed and why it matters. Not the hype. The facts.
What’s actually different? How does it work? What does it do better? What are the real limitations?
Example: “GPT-4.5 Released: What Actually Changed and Why It Matters”
Company news
Real announcements about what companies are building, changing, or announcing. Not spin. What actually happened.
When a company pivots, launches a new AI product, or makes a strategic decision, explain it clearly. What does this tell us about where they’re heading?
Example: “OpenAI Launches New API: Here’s What Changes for Developers”
Funding and business developments
When money moves in AI, it tells you something about where the industry is heading. Report it honestly.
Who’s funding what? Who’s investing in what direction? What does this funding round tell us about the industry trajectory?
Example: “Anthropic Raises $2B Series C: What It Reveals About AI’s Future”
Policy and regulation
Government decisions affecting AI development. What changed, what it means, what’s next.
New regulations? Policy announcements? Government AI strategies? These shape the industry. Report them clearly.
Example: “EU AI Act Goes Into Effect: What Actually Changes Now”
Research breakthroughs
When researchers publish something significant, explain it clearly. What’s new? Why is it important? What does it mean for the field?
Not hype. Real breakthroughs that advance what we know.
Example: “New AI Architecture Breaks Through Scaling Limits: What Researchers Discovered”
Big tech announcements
Microsoft, Google, Meta, Apple integrating AI or announcing AI products. What’s the reality behind the PR?
When big companies announce AI features or products, explain what they actually do and why they matter.
Example: “Google Integrates Gemini into Search: What Changes for Users”
What we don’t publish
Rumors — If it’s not confirmed, it’s not news.
Unverified reports — Don’t guess. Report what you know.
Clickbait headlines — The headline has to match the story. Period.
Sensationalism — Exciting fake news is still fake news.
Spin — Just the facts. Skip the marketing language.
Unconfirmed speculation — If you’re guessing, don’t publish it.
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REQUIREMENTS: HOW TO WRITE FOR THIS CATEGORY
Write like a journalist, not a marketer
Start with what actually happened, not what sounds cool. Back up claims with real sources—links, official statements, credible reporting. Explain the technical stuff clearly without oversimplifying. Be honest about what you know and what you don’t.
If you don’t know something, say “It’s unclear” or “We don’t know yet.” That’s more credible than guessing.
Keep it real
- Minimum 1,200 words (not because of arbitrary rules, but because real news needs context)
- Include sources people can check themselves
- Explain why this matters to people actually reading it
- No unverified claims, even if they sound interesting
Accuracy first, speed second
This is critical. It’s better to be late and right than fast and wrong.
- Verify before you publish
- Use official sources when possible (press releases, announcements, statements)
- Quote people accurately or don’t quote them at all
- If something isn’t confirmed, say it isn’t
- If you made a mistake, we’ll correct it
Structure that works
Start with what changed. Then explain why it matters. Then what’s next. That’s news.
Don’t bury the news halfway through. Don’t make readers guess what you’re talking about. Be clear from the first paragraph.
Sources and links
Include official sources, original research, and credible reporting so readers can verify the information themselves.
If you’re citing a statistic, link to where it comes from. If you’re quoting someone, link to the original statement. Make it easy for people to check your work.
Read more: Powerful Machine Learning Write for Us at Minsaai
HOW TO SUBMIT YOUR AI NEWS STORY
Step 1: Have a real story
Think you’ve got AI news that’s worth covering? That’s where it starts.
It should be:
- Real (actually happened)
- Verified (you can prove it)
- Relevant (people in AI should care)
- Clear (you understand it well enough to explain it)
Step 2: Email us
Send to: writerzarirah@gmail.com
Subject: “AI News: [What Actually Happened]”
In your email, tell us:
- What’s the news? (one sentence, no hype)
- Where’s it from? (official sources)
- Why should people care?
- What’s your take on it?
Step 3: We’ll respond
We’ll get back to you within a day.
If it’s real reporting with solid sourcing, we’ll work with you to get it published.
When a submission needs improvement, we’ll tell you what to fix.
And if it doesn’t fit the category, we’ll explain why.
Step 4: Write your story
1,200+ words. Real journalism. Back it up with sources.
First, describe what changed. Then show why it matters. Finally, outline what happens next. That’s it.
Step 5: We’ll review and publish
We’ll check your work. Make sure the facts are straight. Make sure it’s clear.
If we need clarifications or fact-checks, we’ll ask. You approve any changes before it goes live.
Once it’s published, it stays searchable. It keeps working for you.
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ABOUT YOUR BYLINE
When you publish AI news here, you get:
- Author credit with your name
- Short bio (50-75 words) about you and your expertise
- Link to your website, LinkedIn, or portfolio (your choice)
- Your work attributed to you
That’s how readers know who wrote it. That’s how you build your reputation as a real journalist.
QUESTIONS PEOPLE ASK
Do I need to be a professional journalist?
No. But you need solid reporting skills and verifiable sources. Tech analysts, industry experts, and experienced writers are welcome if your reporting is accurate and well-sourced.
How fast can you publish?
Depends. If it’s urgent news and you’ve got solid sourcing, we can move fast. But we’re not racing the clock. Accuracy matters more than speed.
What if my story breaks elsewhere first?
Still works. Submit with your unique angle or deeper analysis. We value original reporting and insight over being first.
Do you fact-check?
Yes. We’ll verify sources, quotes, and claims. If something doesn’t add up, we’ll ask you about it.
Can I republish after it’s published here?
Yes. After 30 days, you can republish on your own site. Add a canonical tag pointing to Minsaai so Google knows we published it first.
What if I made a mistake?
Tell us. We’ll correct it. That’s what real journalism does.
Do you pay contributors?
We provide byline, link, and your work stays discoverable. We’re not currently paying per story, but we’re open to discussing ongoing relationships with consistent contributors.
What’s the process if my story gets rejected?
We’ll tell you why. If it’s not right for the category or needs work, we’ll explain. You can ask for feedback or try again with a different story.
THAT’S IT
No fake promises about massive audiences. No claims about traffic you don’t know you’ll get.
Just an honest space for people who report on AI the way it should be reported. Accurately. Clearly. Without bullshit.
If that’s what you’re looking for, let’s talk.
Email us your story:
writerzarirah@gmail.com
Subject: “AI News: [What Actually Happened]”