AI is really a story about the people
The machine doesn't want your job, your data, or your attention. It wants nothing. It's a tool — the most capable one we've built, and the most blamed. AI didn't lay you off, drain your town's water, or write the earnings call. People did that, in AI's name, and then pointed at the robot.
We cover the AI era the way it actually works: AI is the constant, and the humans are the variable — and the cause. The executives, the boards, the markets, the money, the governments. We trace every impact back to the hand that made the decision. Not "AI took your job." An executive did — and here's why.
We keep two disciplines and never confuse them. On the numbers, we bring the meter and no verdict — the bubble gets a chart, not a prophecy. On the impact, we have a point of view, and it's this: the harm isn't the technology, it's the rush to over-capitalize it before it was ready. Both live under one masthead. Neither is allowed to contaminate the other.
Everything here is sourced. We would rather be right than loud, and we are built to be feared by the people who are counting on you not to read the filing.
That's the catch. Read the witness — and never take our word for it.