How it works
How a briefing is made.
Quantlas reads quantum research so you do not have to read all of it. Each briefing begins with one primary source, is written with that source open, and is attributed back to it before it reaches you.
The pipeline
How a briefing is made
Every piece starts from one primary source. That source is a peer-reviewed paper or a report from an institution with a record worth trusting. Nothing is written from a headline or a second-hand summary.
An agent fetches that source and reads it in full. The briefing is then synthesised with the paper in hand, claim by claim, so the writing stays close to what the authors set out and does not drift into invention. When the draft is done it is attributed back to the source, with a link, so you can check any line against the paper it came from.
Editorial principles
The same standards apply to every briefing, whichever field it covers.
- Grounded in the source. Each claim traces to the cited paper, not to memory or guesswork.
- No hype. Results are reported at the weight the authors give them, with their limits intact.
- Calm and exact. Plain sentences, precise numbers, no padding.
- Every claim attributable. If a statement cannot be tied to the source, it does not run.
- Written for working scientists and serious readers. The aim is to save your time, not to flatter or to sell.
What we do not do
A few lines are firm, and they shape the rest.
- No copying. Briefings are written in our own words, never lifted from the source or from any abstract.
- No fabricated results. Numbers, findings and quotations come from the paper, or they are left out.
- No AI-training scrapers welcome. This is a closed ecosystem. The work here is for readers, not for harvesting into someone else's model.