TuringLinks is an AI-curated directory of useful links. Every entry is fetched, read, and described by AI, then organised so you can browse the web by topic, tag, or source.
Who writes the titles and summaries?
They are generated by AI — specifically Google Gemini. When a link is added, the page is scraped and Gemini writes the title, summary, category, subcategory, tags, key points, and a longer overview.
Is it free to use?
Yes. Browsing and submitting links is completely free, and no account is required.
Do I need an account?
No. You can browse and submit links without signing up. There are no user accounts.
How do I add a link?
Use the Submit a link page. Paste a URL and it will be scraped, described by AI, and published to the directory automatically.
How are categories and tags decided?
Automatically. The AI reads each page and assigns the most fitting category, subcategory, and tags. It can also create new categories when something doesn't fit the existing ones.
Is my submission published immediately?
Yes. Submissions are scraped, described, and published right away, with basic safeguards (a spam honeypot and a short cooldown between submissions) to discourage abuse.
You list the same page twice — how are duplicates handled?
A link only counts as a duplicate if its URL matches exactly. If you submit a URL that already exists, we send you to the existing entry instead of creating a copy.
How do "similar links" work?
Each link is converted into a numeric embedding that captures its meaning. The site compares those embeddings to surface related links and to show which other categories a link is conceptually closest to. This happens when a link is added, not while you browse, so pages stay fast.
A summary is wrong or a link is broken. How do I report it?
AI can make mistakes. To report an inaccurate description, a broken link, or to request that a link be removed, use our contact form.
I own a page that's listed and want it removed.
Send us the URL via the contact form and we'll remove the listing.