A browser extension that can help identify unreliable news.
A Chrome browser extension that notifies you when you are viewing a potential fake news website.
PolitiFact's Settle It! app helps you fact-check information related to various political issues.
Fact checks information specifically related to the science of climate change and related policy.
A project from the nonpartisan and nonprofit Annenberg Public Policy Center.
From Indiana University, this site helps visualize the spread of fake news and hoaxes.
Rates the accuracy of claims by elected officials and others who speak up in American politics.
Researches and debunks myths, fake news, and rumors floating around on the internet.
A step-by-step guide to reporting fake news articles that are shared on Facebook to help stop it from spreading.
A checklist guide from NPR to help you identify fake news.
Strategies for determining the reliability of sources.
The resources on this page will help you identify fake news in various ways. Whether it's an app that helps you fact check quickly or an online resource that gives you guidelines to consider, these are all tools you will want to use in verifying sources.
Insight on fake news from someone who has helped create it.
A case study that shows how a specific fake news story can spread quickly.
This infographic shows how fake news can be a problem. Using data from a Buzzfeed News study, the graphic from Statista shows how much more people engaged with fake news on Facebook during the 2016 Presidential election cycle compared to regular mainstream media news.