Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
1. About JQJO
Q1. What is JQJO?
JQJO is a news platform that helps you understand the world in about a minute per story.
We collect and process up to 100,000 news articles every day from a wide
range of outlets, then:
- Cluster them into single “stories” (one event, many articles)
- Summarize them into 60-second news briefs
- Show how different sides cover the same event (Left / Center / Right)
- Add historical context, expert analysis, timelines, and impact
- Convert everything into text, audio, and video
You can use JQJO via:
- Website: jqjo.com
- Mobile apps: Android and iOS (JQJO News)
Q2. Who is behind JQJO?
JQJO is built by a small independent team, not a giant media conglomerate.
The project is led by:
Ahmed Mamoor Amimi — Founder, JQJO News
- Serial entrepreneur
- Sportsman who joined the world’s longest Boat Rally in 2021
- Over 25 years of experience in the media industry
- At 47, actively building and experimenting in digital news and technology
Address: 14115 Westmeath Drive, Laurel, MD 20707, USA
Phone: +1 281 760 5280
Q3. Why did you create JQJO?
Because the information environment in the 2020s is a mess:
- Too many articles, too little time
- Misleading and outright false stories spreading fast
- Strong partisan framing people often can’t see
- No easy way to see how the same story is told across political lines
We built JQJO to:
- Expose misinformation, spin, and one-sided narratives
- Help you see multiple angles on the same event
- Save time with short, accurate, contextual summaries
- Let you choose how you consume news
2. How JQJO Works
Q4. Where do you get your news from?
We ingest news from hundreds of reputable sources across:
- International, national, and local outlets
- Left, center, and right political leanings
- Web, broadcast, and digital-native formats
Every day, we scan up to 100k+ articles and identify those:
- Reporting on the same event
- Adding new or unique context
- Providing opinion/editorial vs straight reporting
Q5. How do you summarize the news?
For each story cluster:
- AI reads all relevant articles
- Identifies shared facts, disagreements, and what’s new
- Drafts a 60-second summary
Our editorial team then reviews the summary, sources, and sensitive points.
We aim for:
- Plain language
- No loaded partisan framing
- Clear separation between fact and analysis
3. Text, Audio, and Video
Q12. Why offer text, audio, and video?
- Some people prefer reading
- Some prefer listening while commuting
- Some want short vertical video
All formats are aligned so switching formats does not change the story.
Q13. Is audio and video fully AI-generated?
No. We use a combination of:
- AI-generated drafts
- Human-written or human-verified scripts
- Human review to prevent errors and mispronunciations
4. Editorial Standards & Bias
Q19. How do you ensure accuracy?
- Review coverage from multiple outlets
- Use AI-assisted comparison tools
- Human editorial oversight
- Clear separation between reporting and opinion
Q21. How do you detect political bias?
We do not permanently label outlets.
Bias is evaluated per story using:
- Language and tone
- Which facts are emphasized or omitted
- Source selection
- Framing of responsibility and blame
5. Privacy & Data
Q23. What data do you collect?
- Basic device and usage data
- Aggregate usage patterns
- Account data if you log in
We do not sell personal data or political profiles.
Q24. Do you try to manipulate my political views?
No. Our goal is to expose bias — not hide it.
We do not build psychographic political profiles or sell reading history.