Consider using multiple resources to fact-check the information you are seeing or hearing. As you practice this crucial step, you will learn which ones are your go-to resources. This list is not exhaustive but is curated to give you a starting place.
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News Literacy Project's Misinformation Dashboard, Election 2024 A tool tracking the topics and tactics of the 2024 Election |
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FactCheck.org is a project of the Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania. |
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Fact-checking journalism is the heart of PolitiFact |
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Each fact-checked viral rumor contains concrete tips to help you build your news literacy foundation and confidently evaluate claims you see online. |
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Tracks money in U.S. politics and its effect on elections and public policy. |
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It displays news stories side-by-side to see how each side reports them. |
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The Washington Post Fact Checker Fact-checking the top political news stories |
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One of the original, multi-purpose fact-checking information sources |
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Publishes the latest media ethics news and investigations into ethical lapses. |
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Verifies the latest news for misinformation by debunking false and misleading claims. |
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Examines social media narratives and misinformation |
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A fact-checking website dedicated to helping the public distinguish between true and false information |
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Looks the latest false, misleading, deceptive, or inaccurate stories, videos, or images going viral online—filter content to additional countries other than the United States. |