Reporting that proves itself.
Every story on Inkfeed carries its evidence. Sources, photos, video, location, witnesses — attached, public, and stress-tested by the community.
Why this exists
A story without proof is a rumor. Most platforms treat reporting as content — algorithmic, engagement-driven, optimized for time-on-page. Truth becomes secondary to performance.
Inkfeed treats reporting as a public good. Posts are structured around verifiable claims. The community corroborates, challenges, and adds context. What you see next to every story is not a measure of how popular it is — it is a measure of how supported it is.
How it works
Read
Open any story. You'll see the claim, the evidence behind it, and a pill next to the post that shows how strongly it's supported. Green means well-corroborated; orange means contested; gray means unverified. Inkfeed does not tell you what is true — it shows you the evidence and lets you judge.
Verify
If you can independently confirm a claim — with a document, a photo, a source, or first-hand knowledge — you can corroborate it. This is not a "like." It is a public statement that you can back the claim up.
If you have counter-evidence, you can challenge it. Disagreement without evidence is an opinion, not a challenge. Good-faith challenges, with proof, make reporting stronger.
Every corroboration and every challenge you make becomes part of your own record. Others see what you have verified.
Publish
Anyone can publish on Inkfeed — journalists, researchers, witnesses, subject-matter experts, students, people who simply have something to document. A post is a claim plus its evidence: a headline, a body, and attached proof. Posts can be written, video, or both. Files up to 50MB are supported, or you can paste a link to existing video on YouTube, Vimeo, TikTok, Instagram, X, or Bluesky.
If you saw something happen, you can go Live from your camera. Live broadcasts become permanent posts when they end — your evidence is the recording itself.
Your Inkfeed Score
Every contributor has an Inkfeed Score. It reflects your track record over time — how often your posts get corroborated, the quality of the evidence you submit, your participation in verifying others' work, and how the community votes on your corroborations and challenges.
It is not a follower count. You cannot buy it, boost it, or game it through engagement. It is a measure of credibility built through verifiable work. Your score appears next to your byline so readers can see who they're reading.
The Marketplace
Some of the best reporting needs to be funded. The Inkfeed Marketplace connects organizations that need stories told with the people who can tell them. NGOs, newsrooms, foundations, and individuals post commissions. Writers, filmmakers, photographers, and eyewitnesses bid with their pitch and their portfolio.
Inkfeed handles the introduction. Payment is arranged directly between commissioner and contributor — we do not take a cut, hold escrow, or mediate disputes. What we provide is the credibility infrastructure: a public, verifiable track record of past work that no client portal can fake.
Hubs and community
Hubs are shared spaces around a topic, region, or beat — Bogotá politics, climate accountability, indigenous land rights, a specific election cycle. Follow hubs that match your interests and their posts appear in your feed. Anyone can suggest a new hub.
You can also follow individual contributors. The Following feed shows posts only from people you follow — a smaller, more curated stream than the main feed.
What Inkfeed is not
- Not a social network. We don't optimize for engagement or watch-time.
- Not an opinion site. Posts without evidence are not posts.
- Not advertising-funded. We don't sell your attention.
- Not a fact-checking authority. We provide infrastructure for community verification — readers judge for themselves.
- Not anonymous-by-default. Identity matters; track records matter.
This is BETA
You are using an early version of Inkfeed. Some features are still being built. Some are rough. The platform is shaped by what early contributors do with it — what they post, what they corroborate, what they ask for.
If something does not work, does not feel right, or could be better — write to us. Reporting deserves a place where every claim shows its work, and your feedback is how we get there.
Get started
Read a story. Corroborate or challenge if you can. Publish your first contribution. Build a record that proves itself.