About ConflictLive

Purpose

ConflictLive makes sense of global conflicts for a general audience. We aggregate data from multiple open-source intelligence (OSINT) feeds, news agencies, and humanitarian organizations, then produce original analysis that explains what's happening, why it matters, and what to watch next.

Methodology

Our content pipeline works in four stages:

  1. Data aggregation — We collect reports from RSS feeds (Reuters, BBC, Al Jazeera, France24, DW), structured conflict databases (ACLED, Reliefweb), OSINT Telegram channels, and other open sources.
  2. AI filtering — An interest scoring system evaluates each event for novelty, impact, and narrative potential, filtering out routine updates.
  3. AI-assisted writing — Selected stories are turned into original analysis articles by a large language model. Every article is original writing, not copy-paste from sources.
  4. Human review — A human operator reviews published content for accuracy and quality.

AI Disclosure

This site uses AI-assisted analysis of publicly available information. Articles are generated using large language models and may contain errors or inaccuracies. We cite all sources in every article — please verify claims at the original source.

Editorial Independence

ConflictLive is not affiliated with any government, military, intelligence agency, or political organization. We do not take sides in any conflict. Our goal is to provide balanced, factual analysis that helps readers understand complex situations.