Media literacy platform

Same event. Different telling.

Lay out the coverage from multiple outlets. See where they agree, where they split, and what each one quietly leaves out.

Critical of policySupportive of policy
Al JazeeraThe GuardianBBCReutersNPR
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Why one source is never enough

1

Too much to read

Hundreds of international stories break every day. Nobody reads them all.

2

Too much to see through

Every outlet frames the facts. The framing itself stays invisible unless you look for it.

3

Too little guidance

After finishing one article, choosing what to read next is usually a guess, not a judgment.

What this platform does

Side-by-side comparison

Pull up the same event from multiple outlets. See exactly where consensus ends and framing begins.

Stance spectrum

Place each outlet on a single axis. Position is stance.

Rhetoric spotting

Flag the persuasion techniques in each report: loaded words, missing actors, convenient omissions.

Prediction audit

After the dust settles, check which early predictions held up and which fell apart.

Tap an event on the map to enter the multi-source comparison.

Why this exists

Reading news is easy. Knowing that what you read is only one version of it is harder. This platform does not pick a side for you. It shows you several sides at once, and lets you decide.

The machine analyzes. You judge.

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