Clear-Sight builds tools that teach media literacy — and put those skills to work on the news you read every day.
Most news coverage is designed to capture attention, not inform. Headlines lean on emotion. Stories skip context. Important data gets buried under quotes from people arguing.
The result is a public that reacts to news instead of understanding it — not because people aren't smart enough, but because the information they're given isn't good enough.
Clear-Sight is an AI-powered analysis platform that breaks down news articles and shows you what's actually there — and what isn't. We surface the data, context, and sourcing patterns that matter.
We identify claims that lack evidence, missing context that changes the story, and questions the article should have answered but didn't.
We measure autonomy, logic, source balance, and framing — then show you where the article pushes a perspective instead of presenting one.
We evaluate source diversity, attribution quality, and whether the article relies on expert data or just quotes from people with opinions.
Every article gets scored across 10 metrics. Not a single "trustworthy" stamp — a transparent breakdown you can evaluate yourself.
We believe that when people can see what good reporting looks like — and what's missing from bad reporting — they start demanding better. Not louder coverage. Not more partisan takes. Substantial, evidence-backed journalism.
Clear-Sight isn't about telling you what to think. It's about giving you the tools to see what you're being given — and decide for yourself whether it's enough.
Our browser extension lets you run a full Clear-Sight analysis on any news article as you read it. Fact gaps, bias signals, source quality, and objectivity scores — right in your browser. It's media literacy in action, not just theory.
Get the Extension →Vantage is our editorial layer. We publish analyses of the biggest stories, so you can see how our tool works, without the install. You see the gaps, the framing choices, and the data that got left out — all in one place.
Browse Vantage →News should inform, not manipulate.
We're building toward a public that expects more from the news — because they know what "more" looks like.
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