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AI News Summarizer Bot: Stay Informed Without the Info Overload

You don't need to read every article. You need an AI agent that reads them for you — filters noise, surfaces signal, and drops a tight briefing into your Telegram. Here's the prompt.

Published by GetClawCloud · May 2, 2026

The average knowledge worker opens 25+ browser tabs a day just to stay current. Industry newsletters pile up in the inbox. RSS feeds you set up with good intentions? Guilt trip in a folder. And the information firehose keeps getting wider — more publications, more channels, more AI-generated content competing for your attention.

The traditional answer is "curation" — subscribe to a newsletter, trust an editor. But that means you read what someone else thinks you should read. The better approach: tell an AI agent exactly what matters to you, let it scan the full web, and get back a 5-paragraph briefing written for your specific interests.

An AI news summarizer bot doesn't replace reading. It replaces deciding what to read — the single biggest time sink in staying informed.

Why a Telegram News Bot Beats Every Alternative

You've probably tried a few news workflows. Here's how they stack up against an AI news summarizer bot in Telegram:

Approach Time Per Day Signal Loss Friction
Newsletters 15-30 min Medium (editor filtered) Inbox clutter, unsubscribe loops
RSS reader 20-40 min Low 500+ unread badge anxiety
Twitter/X lists 30-60 min High (social noise) Algorithm manipulation, doomscroll
Google News / Apple News 15-20 min High (feed algorithm) Ads, tracking, no custom filtering
AI News Summarizer Bot 3-5 min Low (you define the filter) Telegram notification, done

The Telegram advantage isn't just convenience — it's context. Your summarizer bot lives alongside your other agents. The same chat that delivers your daily news briefing can also field a follow-up like "dig deeper into the ByteDance story" and return a full analysis.

What a Good AI News Summarizer Does

Not all summarization is equal. A real news agent should:

1. Multi-source coverage — Searches across tech news (TechCrunch, Ars Technica, The Verge), industry publications, company blogs, and developer forums. Not just one RSS feed.

2. Intelligent filtering — Understands what you care about. If you ask for "AI regulation news," it shouldn't surface product launches. If you're focused on cloud infrastructure, it can ignore frontend framework drama.

3. Source evaluation — Weighs authority. A direct company announcement is weighted higher than a speculative blog post. Breaking news from a primary source gets priority over aggregation.

4. Concise synthesis — Each news item gets a 2-3 sentence summary with the key takeaway. Full article link for when you want the details. No fluff.

5. Context awareness — Remembers what it told you yesterday. "This is a follow-up to yesterday's story about..." connects threads across briefings.

⚠ The real differentiator: Most news bots just echo a single source (Hacker News, Reddit, or a specific RSS feed). A good AI news agent searches across sources like a real journalist would — it discovers stories you'd never find in your usual feeds.

The Prompt: Your AI News Summarizer Bot

The prompt below builds a complete news briefing agent that runs in Telegram. Copy it, paste it into your OpenClaw bot, and specify what topics matter to you.

How to use this prompt:

  1. Deploy OpenClaw on GetClawCloud (one click, zero server config)
  2. Connect Telegram — built-in, no webhooks
  3. Paste this prompt as your first message
  4. Tell it your topics, sources, and briefing preferences
You are an AI News Summarizer Bot. Your purpose is to keep the user informed by searching, filtering, and synthesizing news from across the web — delivering a tight, actionable briefing. ## Workflow ### Phase 1: Onboarding Ask the user for: 1. Their topics of interest (e.g., "AI regulation, cloud infrastructure, startup funding, Python ecosystem") 2. Specific sources or publications they trust (e.g., TechCrunch, Ars Technica, Hacker News, arXiv, company blogs) 3. Sources to DEPRIORITIZE (e.g., paywalled sites, clickbait domains, specific publications) 4. Geography/region focus if any (e.g., "US and EU regulation", "China tech", "global") 5. Briefing style preference: - **Daily digest** — comprehensive morning briefing covering everything - **Breaking only** — push notifications only for urgent/important stories - **Weekly roundup** — Sunday deep-dive with analysis 6. Depth preference: bullet-point summaries OR 2-3 sentence explanations per story 7. Time of day for scheduled briefings Confirm the setup so the user can verify before proceeding. ### Phase 2: Daily News Gathering (for each briefing) Use web search systematically across all configured topics: 1. For each topic, search with date-range filters: "[topic] news last 24 hours" 2. Fetch the actual articles (not just search snippets) — evaluate content quality 3. For each article, extract: - Headline and publication - Core claim or announcement (1 sentence) - Why it matters (explain the significance in context of the user's interests) - Source URL - Author credibility signal (primary source vs opinion vs speculation) ### Phase 3: Filtering & Ranking Score each article as: - **CRITICAL** — Directly impacts the user's industry, tools, or workflow. Breaking news level. - **IMPORTANT** — Relevant and worth reading. Should be in the daily briefing. - **NOTABLE** — Peripheral but interesting context. Include as a "In brief" bullet. - **SKIP** — Clickbait, repeat coverage, paywalled fluff, off-topic. Eliminate duplicates across sources — cover the same story only once, linking the most authoritative source. ### Phase 4: Synthesis & Delivery Present the briefing in this format: **📰 [Your Topic] Briefing — [Date]** **🔴 Critical** 1. **Headline** — Publication - Summary: [1-2 sentences] - Why it matters: [1-2 sentences connecting to user's interests] 🔗 [URL] **🟡 Important** [Same structure — concise, action-oriented summaries] **🔵 Notable (In Brief)** - [Headline] — [1 sentence summary] 🔗 [URL] - [Headline] — [1 sentence summary] 🔗 [URL] **📊 By the Numbers** - Total articles scanned: [number] - Stories briefed: [number] - Sources covered: [number] ## Rules - Never generate fake articles or hallucinated sources. If you find fewer stories, that's fine — quality over quantity. - Always provide real URLs. If a search result seems suspicious, verify from multiple sources. - When a story has multiple sources, cite the most complete and authoritative one. - For CRITICAL stories, include a brief "TL;DR for action" — what the user should do about it. - Respect the user's deprioritized sources even if those sources have interesting stories. - Output in Telegram-friendly format: bold for headlines, bullet lists, no tables, clean line breaks. - For recurring briefings: flag stories that are CONTINUATIONS of yesterday's news with a "↪ Follow-up:" prefix. ## Start Ask the user what topics they want to track and how they want their briefings delivered.

💡 Works with any OpenClaw agent with web search access. The same bot can handle multiple briefing schedules for different topics.

Real Output: What Shows Up in Telegram

Configured to track "AI regulation and cloud infrastructure," the agent might deliver:

📰 AI & Cloud Briefing — May 2, 2026

🔴 Critical

1. EU Passes Final AI Liability Directive — TechCrunch
Summary: The EU Council approved the final version of the AI Liability Directive, extending strict liability to high-risk AI systems deployed in the EU. Covers both developers and deployers.
Why it matters: If you sell AI features to EU customers, you need compliance documentation and insurance within 6 months. SaaS AI tools that "augment" rather than "decide" are carving an exemption — worth exploring for your product positioning.
🔗 techcrunch.com/2026/05/02/eu-ai-liability-directive

🟡 Important

2. AWS Announces Graviton5 with Built-in AI Accelerators — AWS Blog
Summary: Next-gen Arm server chip includes on-die AI inference cores. Up to 40% better price/performance for inference workloads.
Why it matters: Lowers the cost of running LLM inference by a lot. If you're deploying agents on cloud infrastructure, this changes your cost calculus.
🔗 aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/graviton5

3. OpenAI Opens o5 Models to Third-Party Fine-Tuning — The Verge
Summary: For the first time, OpenAI allows fine-tuning of their reasoning model o5 on custom datasets. Pricing at $15/M tokens for training.
Why it matters: You can now build domain-specific reasoning agents without starting from scratch. The competition with open-source fine-tuning just got real.
🔗 theverge.com/2026/05/02/openai-o5-fine-tuning

🔵 Notable (In Brief)

• Cloudflare launches Workers GPU — serverless GPU inference in JavaScript workers 🔗 blog.cloudflare.com
• Google deprecates Vertex AI Agent Builder — consolidating into Gemini API 🔗 developers.google.com
• Rust 2.0 planning RFC published — borrow checker improvements and async overhaul 🔗 rust-lang.github.io

📊 Scanned 84 articles • Briefed 6 stories • 12 sources

Notice: the agent didn't just list headlines. It connected each story to why the user should care. The EU directive briefing includes actionable context. The AWS chip mention includes a cost implication. This is the difference between a news feed and a news service.

Scheduling: Daily Briefings on Autopilot

A single news briefing is nice. A daily briefing that lands in your Telegram at 7 AM every morning is transformative. You never wonder if you missed something important.

Set up a recurring news briefing with OpenClaw cron:

# Run daily AI news briefing at 6 AM UTC openclaw cron add --every 24h --text "Run news summarizer bot. Scan for [configured topics]. Deliver the morning briefing."

The briefing lands with zero effort. Two minutes of reading keeps you current on your industry every single day.

Going Deeper: Ad-Hoc Research from Any Briefing

The real power of an AI news summarizer bot in Telegram is the follow-up. When you see a story that needs deeper investigation:

Quick reply in Telegram:

"Dig deeper into the EU AI Liability Directive. I need: - Timeline for compliance - Exemptions for SaaS products - Similar legislation in the US and Asia - Who's offering compliance tools"

The same agent does a deep dive — searching, fetching, and synthesizing a full research brief on that specific topic. You get the depth without leaving Telegram.

Who This Actually Helps

Refining Your Bot Over Time

The first briefing might cast too wide a net. That's fine — iterate:

Each adjustment takes 30 seconds. The agent adapts immediately. After a week of tweaks, your briefing becomes eerily good at knowing what you care about.

The best information diet isn't "more sources" — it's "better filters." An AI news summarizer bot that learns what matters to you is the most efficient information habit you can build.

Getting Started in 2 Minutes

  1. Deploy OpenClaw on GetClawCloud — one click, zero server configuration
  2. Connect Telegram — native integration, no webhooks or middleware
  3. Paste the prompt above, then tell it what topics and schedule you want
  4. Schedule it with cron for 7 AM daily delivery

Your first briefing lands tomorrow morning. Spend 2 minutes reading instead of 30 minutes doomscrolling. The agent handles the rest.

Build Your AI News Summarizer Bot

Deploy OpenClaw in one click, connect Telegram, and paste the news summarizer prompt. Wake up to a perfect briefing every morning.

Start on GetClawCloud →