36 Posts
v0.6.2
Recent·Data
FactsSourcesDataNo Spin
◆ Editorial

How a post becomes a record.

Every post on Recent Data starts as a video on YouTube or a carousel/Reel on Instagram. The published piece is the summary - short, paced, watchable. This page is where the rest lives: the underlying datasets, the source PDFs, the verifiable references, the extended notes that didn't make the final cut.

What this site adds to the post

The native post embeds as-is - same video, same slides, same caption. Below it, you'll find the research the creator worked from: primary documents, transcripts, tables, and links to every cited source. Files are downloadable; sources open in a new tab so you can verify them yourself.

How sources are handled

Primary sources are preferred wherever possible - gazette notifications, official press briefings, investor disclosures, court filings, RBI circulars, IMD bulletins. Secondary reporting is used only when no primary source is available, and is labelled as such. Sources are reusable across posts via a shared library so citations stay consistent.

Independence & disclosures

Recent Data takes no sponsorships, no paid placements, and no affiliate arrangements inside its research pages. If a post ever does include a disclosed commercial relationship - a sponsored video, a collaboration - it will be flagged at the top of that post's page, in bold, with the nature of the arrangement spelled out.

Updates & revisions

Pages are dated. When a post is updated, the modified timestamp moves forward and the change is reflected on the page. Substantive changes are noted inline so readers can see what changed and when.

Corrections

If a published post contains an error of fact, send the post title or URL to hello@recentdata.in with a short note on what's wrong. Substantive corrections get a dated correction note on the post itself; we don't silently edit the page.