Press Release? There's a Wire for That — MediaFuse Now Wires the Whole Internet 🤖
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Press Release? There's a Wire for That — MediaFuse Now Wires the Whole Internet 🤖

By our Markets Desk2 min read

MediaFuse, the company behind crypto press-release distribution network Chainwire, has launched TechnologyWire, a new newswire aimed at the broader technology sector. The service joins MediaFuse's existing paid distribution brands, which include Chainwire, CyberNewsWire, GamingWire, and FinanceWire. According to the company, TechnologyWire is engineered to secure placement in Google News and to optimize press releases so they are "discovered and referenced by conversational AI models."

The launch comes as companies adjust distribution strategies in response to search engines folding AI-generated summaries into results and users increasingly asking chatbots for answers. Marketers are broadening their focus beyond traditional Google rankings to ensure content is retrievable by large language models, a practice sometimes called generative engine optimization. MediaFuse said TechnologyWire routes each release directly onto publisher pages, where it is then treated as "trusted primary-source data" by the crawlers that feed those systems. A MediaFuse spokesperson said the content "goes under deep scrutiny of fact checking, authorization verification to publish the materials and content structures that must adhere to both the platform's and publisher standards."

The approach mirrors MediaFuse's existing crypto operation. Chainwire markets guaranteed homepage placement across more than 100 crypto outlets and same-day publication through direct integrations with publisher content systems, and was named best PR wire at this year's CoinGape Awards. MediaFuse said TechnologyWire runs on a pay-as-you-go model with no subscriptions or minimum spend, enabling communications teams and PR agencies to deploy "targeted, high-impact distribution campaigns aligned precisely with operational launch schedules."

The new product enters a tech policy environment that is moving on multiple fronts. Beijing-based firms ByteDance and Alibaba announced over the weekend they are disabling custom agent features in their largest consumer AI products, citing "product function adjustments" ahead of new rules governing such products taking effect; ByteDance's Doubao notified users on a Friday night notice. Separately, UK Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper warned in an article published Monday that governments risk repeating mistakes made during the dawn of the nuclear age if they wait to create laws governing artificial intelligence, writing that "last month, in Shenzhen, China, I saw the extraordinary promise of AI and robotics used for life-saving healthcare," while cautioning that the same technologies carry new risks as they become more powerful and widely available.

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