British tech mogul Mel Morris has announced the general release of AI research engine Corpora.ai.
The system provides a new approach to research.
Built to generate comprehensive reports from single prompts, Corpora promises in-depth analysis and accurate outputs.

Speed is another big selling point.
According to Corpora, the engine can process 2 million documents per second.
The content is then compiled into summaries or reports.

It’s free, every week, in your inbox.
Corpora has shared an array of the results.
They range from analyses ofautismandAI investmentsto reports on documentaries about theRoswell incident.
Links to sources are provided throughout every text.
Were a research engine were not a search engine, Morris said.
The breadth and depth of what we produce and look at is really important.
Morris shared news of Corporas public release exclusively with TNW.
The announcement marks another milestone in his colourful career.
Last August, he placed in the top 10 of the first-everSunday TimesGaming Rich List.
A substantial slice of his funds is now going into Corpora.ai.
His funding aims to create a new business model for LLMs.
Rather than challenge the leading GenAI firms, Corpora plans to bring a new service to the sector.
The research engine can also integrate existing models on the market.
We dont compete with OpenAI, Google, or DeepSeek, Morris said.
The nice thing is, we can play with all of these AI vendors quite nicely.
As they improve their models, our output gets better.
Its a really great symbiotic relationship.
Those outputs are where Corpora plans to make its mark.
The service is now available via a subscription-based model.
Users are offered monthly plans tailored to their needs.
These technologies skim the tip of the iceberg, he said.
Were letting you see beneath the surface.
Story byThomas Macaulay
Thomas is the managing editor of TNW.
He leads our coverage of European tech and oversees our talented team of writers.
Away from work, he e(show all)Thomas is the managing editor of TNW.
He leads our coverage of European tech and oversees our talented team of writers.
Away from work, he enjoys playing chess (badly) and the guitar (even worse).