STORM by Stanford
AI research prototype for Wikipedia-like topic reports
STORM generates Wikipedia-style reports on a topic through interactive knowledge curation. It is aimed at people who want a research workflow that helps gather and organize information into a structured report.
Is this your tool? Claim this listing to manage your content and analytics.
Ask about STORM by Stanford
Get answers based on STORM by Stanford's actual documentation
Try asking:
About
STORM is a research prototype from Stanford that focuses on interactive knowledge curation. According to the site, it helps you get a Wikipedia-like report on a topic, which puts it in the research and synthesis category rather than general chat.
It appears to be built for users who need structured background research, summarized from multiple sources into a report. The web app is the main entry point, and the page notes cloud credits from Microsoft Azure, but setup details, integrations, and whether there is an API or local install are not clearly documented on the landing page.
The product seems useful when you want a guided research process with human involvement, not a fully autonomous agent that runs end to end on its own. The word "interactive" suggests you participate in shaping the research, but the site does not explain how much control you have, what sources it uses, or whether it can browse the web independently.
Important technical details are also unclear from the available content: there is no mention of the underlying model, pricing, privacy controls, or data retention. Because it is described as a research prototype, it may not be appropriate for production use or sensitive work where you need strong guarantees, admin controls, or vendor documentation.
Responds to prompts but takes no autonomous action.
Dimension Breakdown
Categories
Ask about STORM by Stanford
Try asking:
Pricing not publicly available.
Related Tools
Get the weekly agentic AI briefing
New tools, top picks, and trends — delivered every Thursday.