Editorial Policy
Infrastructure intelligence needs source discipline.
Compute Current uses automated collection and AI-assisted editorial tools, but source discipline, infrastructure relevance, and editing standards determine what appears publicly.
Publication Standard
We do not publish long-form analysis when the source text is incomplete, off-topic, or too thin to support a durable infrastructure read. Narrow but useful items may appear as briefs or source-linked signals.
Source Attribution
Every article page links to the original source. Compute Current keeps its own URL for the analysis while making the original reporting easy to find.
AI-assisted Content Disclosure
AI systems may assist with source processing, categorization, summarization, headline options, drafting, and editing checks. The source article remains the authoritative record, and analysis must remain tied to source-specific facts.
Quality Gates
Full Compute Current articles require source-specific facts, a clear infrastructure thesis, repetition checks, and enough evidence to support decision-useful analysis.
Language Guardrails
We avoid generic repeated infrastructure framing. Drafts are checked for repeated phrases, repeated sentence patterns, repeated paragraph structures, heading similarity, and overly familiar conclusions.