Understand how India’s newsrooms cover a story.
Ask in plain English and get back a brief with every claim tied to the article it came from — not a list of links.
Get started freeFree to start — no card required.
Reads the whole newsstand
Coverage is harvested continuously, from front-page dailies to district editions — answers reflect what the country's press is actually saying.
Checked before it reaches you
A reviewer agent verifies every draft against its sources. If the corpus doesn't cover your question, Samvad says so instead of guessing.
Framing, side by side Coming soon
Compare how different outlets tell the same story — filter by tier and time window.
How to read it
Ask in plain English
Pose a question about how India's press is covering a story. No operators, no scraping.
Read a cited brief
Every claim ties to the article it came from, and a reviewer agent checks the draft before you see it.
Take it further
Revisit any past answer, or hand the cited brief to your own AI — Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini — to draft, analyse, or dig deeper.
Why not just ask ChatGPT? A general chatbot improvises from stale training data or skims a few links — and can't tell you which outlet said what. Samvad reads India's newsrooms every day and cites every claim, so the facts hold up. Establish them here; take them to your AI for the rest.
Who it’s for
The reporter's desk
Independent journalists
Background a story in minutes — what's been reported, by whom, and which angles are still unclaimed.
“What angles are regional papers covering on the NEET re-exam that national dailies haven't picked up?”
The research desk
Academic researchers
Trace how a topic's coverage evolved over weeks or months — no scraping, no coding, no access negotiations.
“How has coverage of the monsoon forecast shifted across outlets this season?”
The comms room
Comms & policy teams
Know how your sector is being covered before anyone asks — without a Meltwater budget.
“How are national dailies framing the India–US interim trade deal this month?”