About CurioSpark
CurioSpark is a small, independent publication about technology, psychology, and the way digital tools quietly shape how we think, work, and decide. It is written and edited by one person, not a team of anonymous writers.
Said — Writer & Editor
Said is a software developer based in the United States. After years of building software, he became fascinated by why some products feel effortless while others quietly drain attention. CurioSpark is where he shares what research actually says about technology, psychology, and the small mechanics of everyday thinking.
Reach out: hello@curiospark.org
What this site is (and is not)
CurioSpark is not a content farm. It is not trying to publish thousands of articles a month. The goal is a smaller library of carefully researched pieces about ideas that are useful, accurate, and grounded in real studies — not viral takes, not motivational filler, not vague summaries.
How articles get written
Each article starts with a question Said is actually curious about. He reads the underlying research — peer-reviewed studies, original reports, statements from the institutions involved — then writes the article in plain English. AI tools may help with first drafts or editing, but every published piece is reviewed, fact-checked, and rewritten by hand before it goes live. Claims that cannot be sourced are removed.
Sources and corrections
Articles cite the studies and institutions they draw from, with links so readers can verify the claims themselves. If you spot a factual error, email hello@curiospark.org with the article URL and the issue. Corrections are noted on the article with the date the change was made.
Independence
CurioSpark is funded by display advertising and is not sponsored by any company or product. No article is written in exchange for payment, and product recommendations (when they appear) are not affiliate-driven.
More about how the work gets done
If you want the details on the editorial workflow or fact-checking approach, both are written out: