Talk:ScienceDaily

Concerns about AI-like rewriting and repackaging of press releases

I'd like to raise a concern regarding the reliability and sourcing practices of Science Daily as a frequently cited source.

In recent use, it appears that the site may primarily republish press releases with clickbait headlines that appear to reframe or reword older research as if it were newly published. This is happening on a large scale:

- The “impossible” LED that could change everything published May 18, 2026; original Tiny antennas to bring electrical power to the un-powerable nanoparticles University of Cambridge, 19 November 2025.

- AI reveals the invisible magnetic chaos wasting energy inside electric motors May 18, 2026; original Tokyo University of Science: New Study Reveals How Maze-Like Magnetic Patterns Form and Evolve in Materials 20 april 2026

Science Daily versions appear to be rewritten and repackaged versions of the original institutional press releases. This pattern is consistent across multiple articles and gives the impression of large-scale automated or AI-assisted rewriting and repackaging of press release content, primarily presenting it in a more click-driven or search-optimized format rather than adding editorial value.

Given this pattern, it may be worth considering whether the wiki article should be removed or revised to better reflect this new publishing model. WikiPiggi (talk) 11:02, 18 May 2026 (UTC)[reply]

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