An investigation reveals that ‘The Wire by Acutus’, a nearly fully automated news platform, employs AI-driven reporters and invents identities to bypass transparency, raising concerns over media deception and political agendas.
An investigation by Model Republic has raised fresh questions about a little-known outlet called “The Wire by Acutus”, alleging that the site is largely powered by artificial intelligence while presenting itself as a conventional newsroom. According to the report, the platform launched in late 2025 and now produces most of its material automatically, with about 97% of its articles generated by AI in an average of 44 seconds. The site is said to use invented reporter identities to contact real experts and obtain comments without disclosing that the outreach is being handled by machines.
Model Republic said one of the personas used by the operation is a fictional reporter called Michael Chen, who allegedly emailed Nathan Calvin, general counsel at the advocacy group Encode. The aim, the investigation claims, was not only to gather quotes but also to steer coverage in ways that would mute criticism of the technology sector. Tom’s Hardware reported that the site has published close to 100 items using real quotations collected by these fake writers, underscoring how difficult it can be to tell human reporting from automated content once the machinery is hidden from view.
The political and financial links surrounding the project have added to the controversy. Model Republic reported that the outlet’s promotion has involved executives connected to Targeted Victory, a consulting firm whose founder runs a committee funded by Greg Brockman, the president of OpenAI. Other reports, including from Futurism and Gigazine, said the site appears tied to OpenAI-aligned political activity and to the super PAC “Leading The Future”, with one account describing it as part of a broader lobbying and influence effort around the company.
The broader concern is less about one website than about the model it represents. If a publication can use synthetic reporters to extract information from real people while masking its own authorship, critics say it creates a new category of media manipulation that is harder to detect and easier to scale. The episode also arrives as technology groups increasingly test how far AI can go in content production and political messaging, leaving open the question of where automation ends and deception begins.
Source Reference Map
Inspired by headline at: [1]
Sources by paragraph:
Source: Noah Wire Services
Noah Fact Check Pro
The draft above was created using the information available at the time the story first
emerged. We’ve since applied our fact-checking process to the final narrative, based on the criteria listed
below. The results are intended to help you assess the credibility of the piece and highlight any areas that may
warrant further investigation.
Freshness check
Score:
8
Notes:
The article was published on April 28, 2026, and references investigations from April 27, 2026, indicating recent and original reporting. However, similar reports have appeared in other outlets, such as Tom’s Hardware and Futurism, which may suggest some overlap in coverage. ([tomshardware.com](https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/artificial-intelligence/news-site-linked-to-openai-super-pac-sent-bots-posing-as-journalists-to-interview-real-people?utm_source=openai)) The article is based on a press release from Model Republic, which typically warrants a high freshness score. Nonetheless, the presence of similar narratives across multiple sources within a short timeframe raises concerns about originality. The earliest known publication date of substantially similar content is April 27, 2026. Given these factors, the freshness score is reduced to 8.
Quotes check
Score:
7
Notes:
The article includes direct quotes attributed to individuals such as Nathan Calvin and Tyler Johnston. However, searches for these quotes yield no online matches, making independent verification challenging. The lack of verifiable sources for these quotes raises concerns about their authenticity. Given the inability to independently verify the quotes, the score is reduced to 7.
Source reliability
Score:
6
Notes:
The article originates from La Razón, a Spanish newspaper. While it is a known publication, it is not a major international news organisation like the BBC or Reuters. The article is based on a press release from Model Republic, which is a niche publication. The reliance on a single source for the main claims and the lack of corroboration from other reputable outlets raise concerns about the reliability of the information presented. Given these factors, the source reliability score is reduced to 6.
Plausibility check
Score:
7
Notes:
The claims about The Wire by Acutus using AI-generated content and posing as human journalists are plausible and align with reports from other sources. However, the article lacks supporting detail from any other reputable outlet, which makes the claims harder to verify. The report also lacks specific factual anchors, such as names, institutions, and dates, which further diminishes its credibility. Given these concerns, the plausibility score is reduced to 7.
Overall assessment
Verdict (FAIL, OPEN, PASS): FAIL
Confidence (LOW, MEDIUM, HIGH): MEDIUM
Summary:
The article presents claims about The Wire by Acutus using AI-generated content and posing as human journalists. However, the reliance on a single source, the inability to independently verify quotes, and the lack of corroboration from other reputable outlets raise significant concerns about the credibility and reliability of the information presented. Given these issues, the overall assessment is a FAIL with MEDIUM confidence.
