ECONALK practices AI-assisted journalism under human editorial oversight. This page explains exactly how our newsroom works, where AI helps, where humans decide, and how we hold ourselves accountable.
Most ECONALK articles are researched, drafted, and copy-edited with the assistance of large language models — primarily Google Gemini. We disclose this openly because trust requires transparency. AI accelerates our reporting, but it does not replace editorial judgment.
Detecting and clustering trending topics across regions; pulling primary-source materials such as government filings, press releases, and corporate disclosures; producing first drafts and translations across our US, KR, and JP editions; running initial fact-checks against multiple independent sources.
Final publishing decisions, story selection on sensitive topics, framing of contested claims, validation of source URLs, and every correction. Articles that fail our verification gate (fewer than three independent sources or unverified central claims) are blocked before publication.
Every article must clear a verification gate before it reaches readers. We require a minimum of three independent, verifiable sources for material claims, validate source URLs, and reject drafts whose central facts cannot be substantiated. When primary sources disagree, we present the conflict explicitly rather than collapse it.
We do not republish wire copy or scrape competitors. Every story produced under the ECONALK banner is an original report assembled from primary materials and named secondary sources. Where we summarize reporting from other outlets, we link out and credit them by name.
If we publish something inaccurate, we say so. Corrections are logged with a public summary, the affected article is updated with a correction notice, and the change is dated. The full corrections log is available on our corrections page.
ECONALK is owned and operated by EternaxCode. We accept no payment in exchange for editorial coverage, and advertising relationships have no influence on what we publish or how we cover it. Sponsored content, when it exists, will be clearly labeled as such.