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The Intelligence Deskthe wire →

How CricHubb reports cricket

CricHubb news is built to be honest by construction. We would rather tell you a story is still developing than pretend it is settled, and rather say nothing than assert a fact we cannot source. Everything below is how that promise is enforced — not by good intentions, but by the way the system is built.

How a story is made

  1. 01

    We watch the whole field

    Reports, wires, verified accounts and official channels across every format and series — not one outlet echoed, but many sources gathered and compared.

  2. 02

    We cluster, not copy

    Stories about the same event are grouped so you read one honest account of what happened, with its sources listed — never five near-duplicate rewrites of a single tweet.

  3. 03

    The Gate blocks the unsourced

    Before a story publishes it passes a fact gate. A claim with no source behind it does not get asserted. The Gate has no override — the desk cannot wave a claim through.

  4. 04

    The state is always visible

    A story wears its lifecycle: Breaking, Developing, Confirmed, Corrected. You always see how settled a story is — we never dress an unconfirmed report as fact.

  5. 05

    Nothing is quietly deleted

    Stories and their corrections stay on the record. A running story keeps its earlier beats so you can read how it developed, not just where it landed.

Where AI is — and isn’t

We use AI to do what it is good at: reading a lot of sources quickly, grouping stories about the same event, and drafting clear prose. We are open about that.

What AI does not do here: invent quotes, invent numbers, or decide what is true. Every factual claim must trace to a source or it does not run. And we never present a machine-generated image as a photograph of a real event — our share images are clearly branded CricHubb cards, never synthetic “photos”.

What we won’t do

  • Assert a claim we cannot source.
  • Fabricate a quote, a scoreline, or a statistic.
  • Present a generated image as real photography.
  • Quietly delete a story we got wrong.
  • Dress an unconfirmed report up as confirmed fact.

When we’re wrong

We correct in the open. A corrected story is marked as corrected and keeps its history. If you have spotted an error, tell us — see our corrections policy.

Editorially curated cricket coverage · May contain inaccuracies. Verify from official sources.