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In Design

Veracitor

Truth, examined

Android

Veracitor is a fact-checking app for the age of misinformation — built for anyone who has read a headline, a social media post, or a forwarded message and wondered whether it was actually true.

The name comes from the Latin verax — truthful, honest, accurate. It is the root of the word veracious. The app does exactly what the name promises.

What makes it different

Most fact-checking tools return a link to a third-party site and leave the user to do the work. Veracitor passes the claim through Claude AI, which breaks it down component by component — identifying every sub-claim, checking each one independently, and citing its sources. The result is not just a verdict but a full explanation: what is true, what is misleading, what is fabricated, and why. Confidence is scored. Sources are named.

It is also country-aware. A claim about NHS waiting times means something different to someone in Leeds than to someone in Texas. Veracitor uses the user's location to prioritise relevant sources and apply the right context — population-adjusted figures, local publication standards, regional date formats.

How it works

The user pastes or types a claim — a news headline, a statistic, a politician's quote, a WhatsApp message — and hits Check. The app returns a verdict of TRUE, PARTLY TRUE, FALSE, or MISLEADING, with a source-backed breakdown of every component. Free users get five checks a day. Pro users get unlimited checks, full history, and priority processing.

The feel

Clean white and slate grey, with verdict colours that carry clear meaning without being garish. No noise, no clutter. The result is designed to be read quickly and trusted completely.

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