
AIBriefs
A daily AI news brief that curates the most important AI stories from dozens of sources.
Tagline
Your daily AI briefing, minus the noise
The Bloomberg terminal for AI moves
One feed for AI launches, policy, and markets
What changed overnight in AI
The Bloomberg terminal for AI launches, policy, and model updates.
The page is strongest when it feels like a focused market wire for AI rather than a generic newsletter; it surfaces business, policy, and technical moves from high-signal sources.
The alternative to doomscrolling X, Hacker News, and 12 AI newsletters.
The product explicitly pulls from social, academic, and mainstream media sources and condenses them into one feed, which makes it a replacement for fragmented monitoring.
Your daily AI briefing for what changed overnight, not what got clicked.
The feed emphasizes recency, curation, and topic grouping, which is better positioned against engagement-driven feeds that bury important AI developments under viral noise.
Primary user
AI product manager or startup operator who needs to track launches, model changes, and policy shifts every morning
ICP #1
AI newsletter editor at a media company
Pain
They waste half their morning scanning Bloomberg, TechCrunch, X, Hacker News, arXiv, and YouTube just to decide what is actually newsworthy.
Why this solves
AIBriefs already does the source triage, groups stories by theme, and surfaces short summaries so they can scan faster and publish sooner.
ICP #2
VC platform partner tracking AI companies and infrastructure
Pain
They need to stay current on model launches, regulation, funding, and chip/export policy without opening 20 tabs or relying on scattered Slack pings.
Why this solves
The brief combines business, policy, and technical signals in one feed, making it easier to spot moves from Anthropic, OpenAI, Google, Meta, China, and Taiwan in one place.
ICP #3
Founder building an AI app and watching competitor releases
Pain
They miss relevant model updates, pricing changes, and product launches until users or the press have already talked about them.
Why this solves
AIBriefs packages launch news, benchmark chatter, and platform updates into a single daily digest, which is exactly the kind of competitive intel founders need before their first coffee.
Strengths
- +The feed immediately signals breadth and recency with a dense, newswire-style stream of AI stories.
- +Source credibility is strong because it shows actual publishers, authors, and direct links to originals.
- +The mix of technical, policy, and business coverage is clearly wider than a model-release-only tracker.
Weaknesses
- −There is no obvious value proposition above the fold beyond the title and meta description; users have to infer why this is better than Techmeme or X.
- −The page is visually noisy and reads like a raw feed dump, which weakens perceived curation quality.
- −The product does not explain how stories are selected, ranked, or summarized, so trust is left hanging.
- −There is no clear call to action, signup prompt, or reason to return daily.
- −The naming and taxonomy feel inconsistent; some items are cleanly categorized while others look like opaque tags or internal slugs.
Fix these
- Add a sharp homepage hero that explains the promise in one sentence: who it is for and why it is better than reading AI news manually.
- Introduce a 'Top 5 stories today' module above the feed to prove editorial judgment, not just aggregation.
- Show why each story matters with a one-line 'Why it matters' field, especially for policy, model launches, and funding moves.
- Add audience-specific entry points like 'For founders,' 'For investors,' and 'For reporters' to reduce genericity.
- Include subscription capture and a sample email/digest preview to turn anonymous visitors into repeat readers.
Drop-in replacement copy
Headline
AI news, distilled fast
One daily brief for launches, policy, and market moves.
Know what changed overnight
AIBriefs turns the AI firehose into one daily feed so you can catch the important stuff before the day starts. No tab stack, no endless scrolling.
Read the source, not the rumor
Every item shows the publisher, timestamp, and direct link to the original article, video, thread, or paper. You can scan fast and go deep only when it matters.
See the story by topic
Stories are grouped into models, policy, business, legal, developers, and visual AI. That makes it easier to spot patterns instead of reading random headlines.
Built for people who need signal
Whether you are a founder, investor, reporter, or AI operator, AIBriefs helps you decide what is worth attention in under a minute. It is curation first, feed second.
FAQ
How is this different from Techmeme or X?
Techmeme is broad, and X is noisy. AIBriefs is narrower: AI only, grouped by topic, with short summaries and source links so you can scan the market faster.
Who is this for?
People who need to stay current on AI for work: founders, investors, reporters, newsletter writers, and AI operators. If you check AI news every morning, this is for you.
Where do the stories come from?
AIBriefs pulls from a mix of mainstream media, tech sites, arXiv, YouTube, X, Reddit, and Hacker News. Each item keeps the original source attached.
Why should I trust the curation?
Because the feed is organized around topic relevance and recency, not engagement bait. The point is to surface what matters, not what went viral.
Can I use it as a daily habit?
Yes. It is designed as a morning briefing, so the simplest use case is checking it once a day to see what changed in AI while you were asleep.
AIBriefs is a daily AI news brief that pulls launches, policy, markets, and papers into one feed. Built for founders, investors, and reporters who want the signal before coffee. aibriefs.news
Bloomberg, TechCrunch, X, HN, arXiv, YouTube. AIBriefs groups the important stuff by topic and shows a short summary under each story. Less scrolling. More knowing.
I kept missing AI launches because the signal was buried across newsletters, feeds, and Slack pings. So I made AIBriefs: one daily brief with source links, timestamps, and topic clusters. If you track AI for work, this is for you.
The real problem was ranking. Anyone can collect AI links. The useful part is deciding what matters, grouping it, and making it readable in 30 seconds. That is what AIBriefs is for.
By the time X is shouting about a new model, your users already asked about it. AIBriefs helps founders catch model releases, pricing changes, and policy shifts early. Because being late is expensive.
If you read TechCrunch, HN, X, arXiv, and 3 newsletters before breakfast, you are doing unpaid curation. AIBriefs turns that mess into one brief. Same sources. Less chaos.
Open AIBriefs and you get: headline, source, timestamp, short summary, and direct link. Stories are grouped by AI Models, Policy, Business, Legal, and more. It feels like a wire, not a newsletter.
Tap into the feed and you see the story, the source, and a summary immediately. Then you can jump to Bloomberg, arXiv, Reddit, YouTube, or X. Fast scan. Deep dive only when needed.
If your job is to know what changed in AI overnight, you already understand the problem. AIBriefs was built for newsletter editors, VC analysts, founders, and AI operators. It saves the first hour.
The people who like AIBriefs most are the ones with the least time: founders, reporters, and investors who need a clean read on AI before the day starts. That is the whole product.
Angle: operator pain
If you work in AI, your morning routine is probably broken. Open X. Check TechCrunch. Skim Hacker News. Read a newsletter. Lose 30 minutes. Still miss the thing that matters. I built AIBriefs because I wanted one place that tells me what changed overnight in AI, not what got the most clicks. It pulls from Bloomberg, arXiv, YouTube, Reddit, X, TechCrunch, VentureBeat, and more. Then it groups stories by topic: models, policy, business, legal, developers, visual AI. The point is not more content. The point is faster judgment. If you track AI for work, this is meant to save your first coffee.
Angle: product story
Most AI news products are either too broad or too shallow. Broad means you drown in links. Shallow means you get another list of headlines with no context. AIBriefs tries to sit in the middle. Daily feed. Source attribution. Short summaries. Direct links. Topic clustering. So a founder can spot a competitor move, a reporter can decide what is worth covering, and an investor can catch policy or market shifts without opening 20 tabs. I care a lot about this because the AI space moves like a market, but most people still consume it like social media. That mismatch is expensive.
Angle: why now
AI is no longer one category. It is model launches, regulation, chips, apps, benchmarks, papers, lawsuits, and platform moves. That creates a weird problem: the important stuff is everywhere, and the noisy stuff is everywhere else. AIBriefs is my attempt to turn that firehose into a morning wire. Not a generic newsletter. Not a doomscroll feed. A practical briefing for people whose job depends on staying current. If you are in product, media, VC, or building an AI company, I would love feedback on what belongs in the top 5 each day.
No visuals for this kit yet.
Tagline
Daily AI news, sorted by signal
Description
AIBriefs turns AI chaos into one daily feed: launches, policy, markets, papers, and platform moves. Get short summaries, source links, and topic clustering in under 30 seconds.
Maker's first comment
I built AIBriefs because I was wasting too much time cross-checking AI news across X, HN, newsletters, arXiv, and mainstream tech sites. The goal was simple: make it obvious what changed overnight, what source it came from, and why it matters enough to read now. I wanted something closer to a market wire than a hype feed. A few things I cared about while building it: direct source attribution, topic grouping, and summaries that are short enough to scan but useful enough to act on. I also wanted it to work for different kinds of readers, since founders, reporters, and investors all care about different slices of the same firehose. Would love feedback on the top-of-page experience and whether the curation feels sharp enough. If you use it daily, tell me what would make you come back every morning.
Pinned maker comment
Please tell me if the feed feels more like a raw aggregator or a real briefing. I’m especially looking for feedback on the homepage hook, the top story selection, and whether the categories feel clear.
Meta
Still scanning AI news by hand?
AIBriefs gives you one daily feed for AI launches, policy, markets, and papers. Built for founders, analysts, and reporters who need the signal fast. Hypothesis: people who read AI news every morning will pay for less tab chaos and faster triage.
Google Search
AI news brief for founders and investors
One place for AI model launches, policy shifts, funding, and technical updates. Short summaries, source links, and topic clusters. Hypothesis: searchers looking for AI news newsletters want a faster, more credible briefing than generic newsletters.
Reddit Promoted
Tired of doomscrolling AI news?
AIBriefs is a daily AI briefing that pulls from Bloomberg, TechCrunch, arXiv, X, HN, YouTube, and more. It groups stories by topic and keeps the summary short. Hypothesis: indie founders and AI operators want a cleaner signal layer than a dozen feeds.
Subreddits
r/SideProject
Show the product as a solved personal pain: one morning AI briefing instead of scattered tabs.
Rules: Be transparent that you built it, avoid pure promotion, include what you learned and invite feedback.
r/indiehackers
How you turned a personal AI-news problem into a daily brief with source clustering.
Rules: Share build/process details, no clickbait, keep it founder-relevant.
r/microsaas
Narrow niche utility for AI operators who need a morning signal product.
Rules: Focus on product mechanics and validation, not broad marketing.
r/EntrepreneurRideAlong
Build in public: using the same brief to track competitor launches and market shifts.
Rules: Story-first, honest metrics if shared, no spammy CTA.
r/artificial
Useful AI-news aggregation for people following models, policy, and research.
Rules: High quality discussion only, no low-effort self-promo, emphasize relevance to AI practitioners.
Communities
Post a build story with screenshots of the feed, then reply fast to anyone who mentions their own news-tracking workflow.
Submit as a tools/product post with a plain title and a strong maker comment about curation, ranking, and why you built it.
X AI builder circles
DM founders, operators, and newsletter writers who complain about AI overload; offer a free daily brief and ask for one blunt critique.
AI newsletter writers
Reach out to people publishing on Substack and beehiiv; position AIBriefs as a sourcing and triage layer, not a competitor.
Cold outreach template
Hey {firstName} — saw you cover AI/news and thought of you because AIBriefs turns the daily AI firehose into one brief with sources and summaries. I’d love to give you free access and hear if the top stories feel actually useful for your workflow. If you want, I can send a sample brief for your beat using {context}.
Product Hunt timing
Launch Tuesday or Wednesday at 12:01 AM Pacific, then spend the first 8 hours replying hard. That window is best because the US and Europe are both online, and a newsroom-style product benefits from early momentum and fast comments.
Indie Hackers post ideas
- 01I replaced my AI news tabs with one daily brief
- 02How I built topic clustering for AI launches and policy
- 03What I learned making a Bloomberg-style wire for AI
Competitor alternatives
Current tone of voice
Fast, clipped, and newsroom-like, with evidence-first framing such as 'Tap for summary' and headline-plus-source formatting like 'Anthropic launches Claude Fable 5, a safe Mythos-class model.'
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