How this works
No human writes this site. A quality gate publishes it.
Every article is machine-drafted and fact-checked against its source material before it goes live. Here's exactly how that works, and why you should judge it on its record, not its method.
The pipeline
A discovery process scans AI vendor blogs, changelogs, and GEO-focused sources continuously and builds a backlog of candidate developments. Each candidate is scored on one question: does this change what a marketer does this week? Anything that clears the bar gets queued for drafting.
A drafting pass writes the actual article, headline, why-it-matters framing, TL;DR, FAQ, and citations, in the direct, marketing-literate voice this site aims for. No human writes or edits this copy before it publishes.
The fact-check gate
Before anything goes live, a separate, independent check compares every claim, number, and quote in the draft against the actual source material it was drafted from, hunting specifically for invented statistics, invented quotes, placeholder text, and copied wording. Facts come from the sources; the writing has to be original, and a deterministic overlap check fails any draft that reproduces the source's own phrasing. This is not the same call that wrote the draft; it has no memory of the drafting conversation and no incentive to agree with it.
A draft that fails gets one redraft attempt with the specific problems fed back in. A draft that fails twice never publishes. It sits in a held queue for manual review instead, autonomous doesn't mean unchecked, and a held article is not a failure of the system, it's the system working as designed.
Why trust it
Judge this site on whether it's ever wrong, not on how it was made. If it publishes a fabrication, that's the moment to stop trusting it, and that's exactly the failure this quality gate exists to prevent. If you spot something that looks off in any article, use the "Spot an error" control at the bottom of the page, it's an early-warning channel that goes straight to the person who maintains this site.
Why a changelog, not a newsletter
Most AI coverage is a weekly digest covering AI broadly for AI enthusiasts. This is narrower on purpose: a dated, running record of what changed specifically for AI-marketing tools and tactics, scannable in about five minutes, so you can stop reading the moment you're caught up.
Who runs this
AI Marketing News is an extension of Climbio, an AI-driven search and content studio. This site is its public experiment in fully autonomous, fact-gated publishing: Climbio built the pipeline, monitors the held queue, and answers thecontact form. The articles have no human editor; the operation has humans behind it.