Source wire
How to Read the Source Wire Without Mistaking It for an Endorsement
A short guide explains why VINI surfaces official pages, public documents, outside coverage, and monitored feeds while still labeling what is verified, attributed, or unresolved.
newsroom / brief
Get updates, read source context, send useful records, share the story, or support the reporting work from the reading page.
A short guide explains why VINI surfaces official pages, public documents, outside coverage, and monitored feeds while still labeling what is verified, attributed, or unresolved.
Use the references, response options, and updates before treating any contested detail as complete.
Open topic path or search related wording such as records, sources, agencies, dates, and locations.
The source wire is a visibility tool. It helps readers inspect the public-source layer behind a topic. It is not a blanket endorsement of every outside page or a claim that every linked item has been independently verified by VINI.
What a wire item can be
A wire item can be an official page, public document, outside article, agency notice, press release, court page, standards page, or monitored feed entry. Some items are starting points. Some are corroborating context. Some are included because they need follow-up.
What labeling should do
A serious wire should label the publisher, source type, priority, topic, and whether the item is official, external, internal, or under review. Search results should preserve that context so a matched source does not look like a VINI-authored article.
Why it belongs on the site
Readers should not have to trust a publication’s sourcing blindly. They should be able to inspect what the newsroom is watching, what is original, what is attributed, and where a News archive still has gaps.
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