Condenses the article
Signal gives a short article summary so you can understand the topic quickly before deciding whether to keep reading.
Article trust inspection for the web
Signal summarizes articles, extracts key claims, checks for visible source support, and gives an explainable Trust Score based on whether the article makes itself verifiable.
Signal does not decide truth. It evaluates whether the article gives visible reasons to trust it.
SIGNAL
This article gives limited visible reasons to trust it.
This article reports a central claim, but Signal found limited visible support near the claims that matter.
Low. The article relies on attribution and does not provide a clear verification path for key claims.
Signal starts from low trust. Articles earn trust by making their claims verifiable.
How Signal works
Signal gives a short article summary so you can understand the topic quickly before deciding whether to keep reading.
Signal identifies what the article appears to claim, then looks for visible support near those claims.
Links, documents, citations, official pages, reports, and referenced-but-unlinked documents are surfaced for inspection.
The Trust Score is based on visible signals: authorship, source support, source range, publication info, and commercial pressure.
The standard
Signal rewards articles that make it easier for readers to verify what matters. A linked document, filing, study, dataset, transcript, or original statement matters more than vague attribution.
If an article references a letter but does not link it, Signal can label that directly: Document referenced, not linked.
Trust Score
Privacy-first
Signal analyzes webpage content locally in your browser. It does not send article text to OpenAI, Gemini, or a backend service. It does not sell browsing history.