Tech Tide was founded on a simple premise: the technology shaping our world deserves more than press releases and surface-level coverage. We write for people who want to actually understand what's happening.
The technology press is dominated by two modes: breathless hype and reflexive doom. Both are simple. Neither is useful. Real understanding of what's happening in computing, AI, and digital culture requires patience, domain knowledge, and a willingness to sit with complexity.
Tech Tide exists to do the slower, harder work. We research deeply, report carefully, and write for readers who are capable of handling nuance — because they're the ones who'll be building the systems, making the policy, and living through the consequences.
We're independent. We don't take advertising. We don't accept paid placements. Our loyalty is to the accuracy of our coverage and the readers who trust us.
The principles that guide every piece of reporting we publish.
Every factual claim is verified before publication. We correct errors prominently and promptly. No speculation is presented as fact.
We have no corporate backers, no advertising revenue, and no financial relationships with the companies we cover. Our analysis is our own.
We read the academic papers, the technical documentation, the court filings. We talk to researchers, engineers, and regulators — not just communications teams.
Technology's impact is not limited to Silicon Valley. We cover regulatory developments in Europe, hardware supply chains in Asia, and digital rights movements worldwide.
Technical depth doesn't require jargon. We write clearly for readers who are intelligent and curious but may not have computer science degrees.
We protect the identities of confidential sources. People who trust us with sensitive information can rely on us to keep that trust.
Our readers are software engineers, product managers, researchers, investors, policy professionals, and anyone who wants to understand technology beyond the headlines. They're skeptical of hype but genuinely excited by the real things happening at the frontier of computation.
They read us because they trust our judgment, because we've earned that trust by getting things right over time, and because we treat them as intelligent adults who can handle complexity.