Evident - Trusted social reviews, right where you shop.

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Evident helps shoppers make confident buying decisions by bringing trusted opinions and verdicts from Reddit, YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram directly to e-commerce sites. It cuts through fake reviews, sponsored content, AI-generated testimonials, and biased recommendations so you can see what real people actually think before you buy.

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Hey Product Hunt 👋 I'm Samrat. Maker of Evident. Excited to launch Evident today. Evident helps shoppers make confident buying decisions by bringing trusted opinions and verdicts from Reddit, YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram directly to e-commerce sites. I built this because product reviews are getting harder to trust — fake reviews, sponsored content, AI-generated testimonials, and biased recommendations make it difficult to know what real customers actually think. This is still early, and I’d love your feedback on how Evident can become more useful, trustworthy, and clear for shoppers and brands. I’d love to hear from you: when shopping online, where do you usually go to check whether a product is actually worth buying? It’s free to start - I’d love your honest take, and I’m here all day to answer anything.

The overlay placement is smart, it feels like a natural extension of the product page rather than a clunky add-on, and pulling from Reddit and TikTok in one view is a genuinely useful move.

 Thank you so much, really glad the overlay felt natural 🙏

And yes, Reddit + TikTok together has been interesting because they often show very different kinds of signals -Reddit gives deeper discussion, while TikTok/comments can show quick social proof and real usage reactions.

Curious: when you’re shopping online, which source do you personally trust more for product validation - Reddit discussions, short-form videos, YouTube reviews, or something else?

Finally something that filters out the obvious sponsored fluff on Amazon, saw a skincare product drop and the side-by-side opinions from actual subreddits saved me a return.

 EXACTLY! Skincare is such a good example because sponsored reviews and polished product-page claims can make everything look "perfect." Still, subreddit discussions often surface the real stuff - irritation, long-term results, skin-type fit, and whether people would actually repurchase.

Thank you so much for raising this. Appreciate it! :)