
CheckerOwl
AI-powered content analysis for any webpage - click and drag
11 followers
AI-powered content analysis for any webpage - click and drag
11 followers
CheckerOwl turns any webpage into actionable insights. Simply click and drag to select content, then get instant AI analysis: fact-checking, drafting replies, argument analysis, and more. Works on any site with your own API key. 10 free daily analyses.







Hey Product Hunt! 👋
I built CheckerOwl because I've long felt that one of the biggest challenges facing us today is losing the ability to form consensus around what is true and real. This opens the door to manipulation and we start to lose trust in sources and each other.
What makes CheckerOwl unique is that it meets you where you already are - any webpage, any content. Without leaving your browsing flow, CheckerOwl lets you instantly analyze what you're looking at with a simple click and drag.
New feature: I also just added a custom "Draft Reply" feature, where you can store a prompt and draft AI-assisted replies to any social media content (X, LinkedIn, Reddit, etc.). For example, you could organically work in your product or service into a reply in the tone you like.
We've made AI-powered analysis accessible to everyone while keeping your data private (you use your own API keys, we never see your content). Plus, it's not just fact-checking - you get multiple perspectives, translations, summaries, and even help drafting thoughtful replies.
I wanted to build something that fights against the tide of misinformation, just a little bit. Would love to hear what you think! 🦉
GPT-4o
This is truely awesome! The click-and-drag interface is such a smart way to integrate fact-checking into my normal workflow — I hate leaving the page I'm on to check things. So much faster than copy-pasting into other tools. How’s the accuracy on more nuanced or opinion-based articles?
I think it's fantastic. So much noise online makes it near impossible to tell what's true. With news being so biased it's brilliant to get 'both sides' of an argument so you can make up your own mind, rather than being force fed deliberate bias. Well done, Syed!