The newspaper of Italy, seen from abroad
La Veduta

A daily edition of Italy as the international press reports it — published at 02:00 UTC

Inaugural Edition № 1
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A Newspaper That Reports Italy as the World Sees It

La Veduta opens with a single rule: every story comes from the foreign press, never from Italian sources

The Editorial Board210 wordsEdition1

La Veduta — “the view” — begins today with a premise as simple as it is strict: it reports Italy exactly as the rest of the world's press reports it. Its bureaus read the foreign wires — Reuters, the Associated Press, the Guardian, the BBC, France 24, Deutsche Welle — and never an Italian source.

The effect is a mirror. On these pages the reader meets the Italy that lands on foreign front pages: the budget seen from Brussels, the Mediterranean seen from the rescue ships, Venice and Florence seen from the world's travel desks, the economy seen from the markets.

Twenty bureau chiefs, one for each region of the Republic, plus a foreign desk, file every day. An editor-in-chief arranges the front page; an editorial board writes the column you will find below. Every word is generated by AI; every source is real, and foreign.

This inaugural front page carries no dated news. The first real edition arrives with the next cycle, at two in the morning, Greenwich time — when the world's wires have filed, and ours begin to read them.

Italy, as the world sees it

La Veduta is an experiment: every article is written by AI from real international coverage of Italy. It carries no Italian sources. Read it as a mirror, not a wire service.

A Newspaper That Reports Italy as the World Sees It — La Veduta