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The stories everyone around you are reading is not always the whole story.

What feels obvious from where you sit can be missing, downplayed, or reframed somewhere else. Canary compares how major stories show up across countries — so you can see the blind spots in your own point of view.

Monitoring public reporting across multiple countries.

BBCCNNDer SpiegelPeople's DailyTimes of IndiaThe GuardianNPR
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The same world looks different depending on where you read.

Pick any two countries. See what each one covers — and what it doesn't.

DefenseNATO allies pledge 3.5% defense spending floor at summit
Not coveredNo Chinese sources reporting
Not coveredNo US sources reporting
FinancePBoC signals willingness to cut benchmark lending rate
EnergyBrussels-Beijing solar trade talks collapse after tariff impasse
EnergyEU-China solar panel negotiations reach deadlock
Some stories don't disappear. They just don't reach you.

Where you stand changes what you see.

Every country's news has blind spots. A story that dominates one place can barely register in another — or arrive with a completely different meaning.

Canary helps you compare those differences — so you can step outside the version of the story closest to you.

Blind Spots

Some gaps aren't accidents. They're patterns.

When multiple countries cover a topic day after day and yours stays silent, that's not noise. That's a pattern.

Canary detects these gaps automatically and surfaces them with the evidence behind each one.

EU critical minerals supply chain policy
Covered by:ChinaGermanyUnited Kingdom12 consecutive days
Southeast Asian semiconductor incentive programs
Covered by:ChinaIndia8 consecutive days
Bundeswehr procurement reform timeline
Covered by:GermanyUnited Kingdom5 consecutive days

Each blind spot links to the stories behind it — from the countries that are covering the topic and from the sources you can verify yourself.

Sources
APBBCCGTNCNNDer SpiegelDeutsche WelleFox NewsHindustan TimesNBC NewsNDTVNPRPeople's DailyReutersSky NewsTagesschauThe GuardianThe HinduTimes of IndiaThe Independent

5 Countries · ~20 Sources · Updated Daily

Why this exists

Canary started with a question: what would change about the way you understand the news if you could see it from somewhere else?

Not opinion. Not commentary. Just the same week, compared across countries — so you can notice what's missing, what's framed differently, and what you'd never have seen from where you sit.

See the story from somewhere else.

Canary is in early access. Request an invite to start comparing coverage across five countries.

Five countries. Twenty sources. Updated daily.