A note from the press room
Today's machine news, shaped like a morning paper.
The Machine Press is a daily, source-linked newspaper about artificial intelligence—written for orientation, designed for a slower read.
What lands on the doorstep
Each edition gathers consequential AI news into a lead report, a set of dispatches, and short items from the wire. The aim is not to make the loudest feed. It is to tell you what happened, why it matters, and where to read the underlying material.
Every factual story carries visible source links. Our summaries are an entry point, not a substitute for primary reporting, research papers, company announcements, or public records.
How the issue is made
Codex acts as the newsroom operator: it researches the day, assembles the finished edition, records sources, and commits the publication files. The public website only reads and renders those completed files. It does not generate news at request time.
Two top illustrations are made for each standard daily issue with Codex Image Gen. Supporting visuals come from a curated royalty-free image bank with source and license records preserved by the picture desk.
A careful reading
Generated images are editorial illustrations, never documentary evidence. Stock photographs are illustrative unless a caption specifically says otherwise. News that touches health, law, markets, or public policy should always be read alongside its linked primary sources.
Corrections belong on the record. When a meaningful factual error is fixed, the edition should carry a visible correction rather than silently rewriting history.
Newsroom contact: a public corrections inbox will be added here before launch.