Noisy
We don't read the news. We read the documents that become the news.
Where we read
How Noisy works

Every day, government agencies, standards bodies, research labs, and international institutions publish documents that almost nobody reads. Buried in that output are small decisions that quietly change industries, economies, and sometimes the world.

Noisy uses AI to scan these sources continuously and flag items that look like structural signals — things that could change costs, regulations, infrastructure, or research directions. A human editor reviews everything before it appears here.

The machines read the boring parts. We tell you what might matter.


Current sources
Regulatory Filings

Where rules get made — before they make news.

US Federal Register — proposed and final rules across all US federal agencies
EUR-Lex — EU regulations, directives, and decisions from the Official Journal
Research Papers

Capability shifts and cost breakthroughs before they reach the press.

arXiv — preprints in AI, computational biology, economics, and social physics
Development Reports

Structural shifts in global poverty, health, and infrastructure — things that improve slowly and rarely make headlines.

World Bank — working papers, policy notes, and data releases
Energy Data

The deployment numbers behind the energy transition — capacity, generation mix, storage.

EIA — US Energy Information Administration monthly data releases

Sources are added as pipelines are validated. Coming next: standards bodies, procurement awards, patent filings, labor statistics.