Editorial Policy
Future Technology is a daily tech publication that explains the biggest stories in AI, computing, EVs and consumer tech. This page explains how we choose, write, check and correct our stories.
How stories are selected
We cover the biggest tech news of the day, chosen by what is genuinely important rather than what generates the most clicks. We monitor breaking news, trusted publications, social platforms and reader tips to decide what deserves coverage. The filter is simple: would a curious, non-technical person benefit from understanding this? If yes, we write it.
How facts are checked
Every claim in an article is verified against its original source before publication. We use multiple sources wherever possible, and every article links to the reporting, data or announcement it draws from. If we cannot verify a claim, we either attribute it clearly or leave it out.
Our sources typically include official company announcements, filings, established news outlets and publicly available data. When a story relies on a single unnamed source, we say so.
How AI is used
Our AI disclosure
- Research and initial drafting use AI tools to work faster and more efficiently
- Every article is human-reviewed and edited by Nath Connell before publication
- AI never makes editorial decisions about what stories to cover or how to frame them
- Sources are always linked so readers can verify the information themselves
We use AI as a tool, not a replacement for editorial judgement. AI helps with research gathering, summarising source material and producing initial drafts. The editor reads every draft, checks claims against sources, rewrites where needed and makes the final call on publication. No article goes live without human review.
Human review process
Before any article is published, the editor reviews it for accuracy, clarity and tone. This means checking that every factual claim traces back to a linked source, that technical concepts are explained in plain language, and that the writing is free of jargon, filler and speculation presented as fact. If something cannot be confirmed, it gets cut or flagged as unconfirmed.
Use of sources
Every article links to its sources, usually at the bottom of the page in a dedicated sources section. We link directly to the original reporting or primary source wherever possible, not to aggregated summaries. Readers should always be able to check our working.
Sponsored content
Sponsored content is always clearly labelled. When a piece of content is paid for by a partner or advertiser, it will carry a visible disclosure at the top of the article. Sponsors do not get editorial control over the content. They do not approve drafts, influence the angle, or have any say in what else we publish. Advertising and editorial are kept separate.
For advertising enquiries, contact [email protected] or visit the advertise page.
Affiliate links
Some articles, particularly buying guides and product reviews, contain affiliate links. If you buy something through one of these links, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. This is always disclosed in the article. Affiliate relationships never influence our recommendations, rankings or editorial coverage. We recommend products based on research, real-world testing and reader value, not on which brand pays the highest commission.
Corrections policy
We take accuracy seriously, and when we get something wrong, we fix it.
If you spot an error in any article, email [email protected] with the article link and details of the issue. We review every correction request.
When a correction is needed, we update the article and add a note at the bottom explaining what was changed and when. For minor fixes like typos or broken links, we update the article without a formal correction note. For material errors that affect the meaning or accuracy of the story, we add a visible correction notice.