One widespread way to enhance access to digital material is through a method called ’content enrichment’. Enrichment consists of several techniques such as entity annotation (e.g., named entity recognition—NER), entity linking (e.g., entity disambiguation), text classification and linguistic annotation (e.g., parts-of-speech tagging—POS). In this chapter, I present the enrichment of ChroniclItaly 3.0 as an example of how the post-authentic framework can be used as the applied theory for the curation of digital material. ChroniclItaly 3.0 has been enriched for NER, geocoding and sentiment. Throughout the chapter, I show fundamental concepts and methods of the post-authentic framework by focussing specifically on the key parts of the enrichment process that draw attention to the fluid exchanges between computational and human agency. I argue that in the contemporary context of digital knowledge creation practices, the task of digital enrichment cannot be handled as a fully automatic operation. As computational models are based on biased and incomplete datasets, I make a case for a dynamic conceptualisation of the digital object as unfinished, situated and intentional, acknowledged as containing its past ecosystem alongside present and future curators’ and users’.