No Billionaire Curation

Introducing QuarexNews — Civic news for any location on earth

We just launched something we think matters.

QuarexNews is a new civic news platform that delivers structured, sourced local news for any location on earth — from your zip code to your country — in 15 languages.

No editor picked these stories. No billionaire decided what you should care about. No algorithm optimized for your outrage. You choose your location, you choose your topic, and you get the news — sourced, structured, and direct.

Here's what makes it different:

Fractal News

QuarexNews works at every scale. Enter a small town in rural Kansas and get news about that town — not the nearest city, not the state capital, not whatever's trending nationally. Enter Tokyo, Tehran, or São Paulo and get the same structured coverage. The taxonomy follows the location: your local government, your schools, your housing market, your elections, your environment. Twelve categories of civic news, shaped by where you live.

No Curation Layer

Every major newspaper in America is owned by someone with interests that aren't yours. Alden Global Capital is gutting local newsrooms for profit. Billionaires buy editorial influence the way they buy senators. QuarexNews has no owner with a portfolio to protect. It uses AI grounded in real sources to answer the questions that matter to your community — and it tells you where every claim came from.

15 Languages

English, Spanish, French, German, Portuguese, Italian, Arabic, Farsi, Pashto, Hindi, Russian, Chinese (Simplified and Traditional), Japanese, and Korean. Because civic news shouldn't require you to read English.

What it covers:

Top Stories
Government & Politics
Elections & Voting
Economy & Jobs
Schools & Education
Crime & Public Safety
Health & Healthcare
Housing & Development
Environment & Weather
Transportation & Infrastructure
Community & Culture
Corporate & Industry
Try QuarexNews Now

Enter your city, zip code, or any location in the world.

This is what AI should be doing — not replacing journalists, but filling the gap that the news industry left when it decided your attention was more profitable than your information.

— Peter Nehl
Quarex