AI-generated research papers look perfectly legitimate.
They have fake DOIs, fake authors, and fake data. Can you spot them?
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"I was about to submit my thesis with a source that looked completely real — journal name, DOI, everything. FactCheckTool flagged it as AI-generated. My advisor would have caught it. Crisis avoided."
"As a grad student, I check 20+ sources per paper. FactCheckTool cut my verification time from hours to minutes. It caught 3 fabricated studies in my literature review that I almost missed."
"A classmate got flagged for academic dishonesty because they cited an AI-generated paper without knowing. I started using FactCheckTool the same day. Best decision of my academic career."
AI generates complete research papers with realistic abstracts, methodology sections, fake data sets, and fabricated citations. They appear in Google Scholar results and look indistinguishable from real research.
Professors use AI detection tools on your citations now. One fabricated source can trigger an academic integrity investigation. The consequences: failed papers, academic probation, or worse.
Search engines index fake journals, predatory publishers, and AI-generated articles alongside legitimate sources. There's no filter. No warning label. You have to verify yourself.
An article, research paper, news report, or online claim. It looks credible — but in 2026, looking credible means nothing.
Takes 3 seconds. Copy the URL of any article, paper, video, or social media post you want to verify before citing.
In 60 seconds, our AI analyzes the source against multiple databases and tells you: CREDIBLE, QUESTIONABLE, or FABRICATED — with evidence.
Right now, in your research folder:
• At least one source could be AI-generated or from a predatory journal
• Your citations may reference papers that don't actually exist
• Statistics you're quoting might be completely fabricated
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Join 15,000+ students and researchers who verify before they cite.
Protect your grades. Protect your reputation.
The question isn't "Are my sources good enough?"
The question is: "Can I afford to find out on grading day?"