Learn how to evaluate news sources, what credibility scores measure, and why source reliability matters for understanding reported facts.
Not all news sources are created equal. This guide shows you how to evaluate source credibility using concrete signals, independent checks, and analysis tools.
A credibility score is a useful signal — not a verdict. Understanding what it measures and what it cannot measure will help you use it more effectively.
What a news article leaves out can be as significant as what it includes. This guide explains missing context and how to spot it.
Credibility Score
A numerical indicator (0–100) of how reliably a news source or article follows journalistic standards of accuracy and transparency.
Source Reliability
A historical assessment of how consistently a news publisher produces accurate, transparent, and well-sourced reporting.
Missing Context
Information absent from a news article that would significantly change how readers understand or evaluate the reported events.
Paste any news article URL into Auren and get an instant breakdown of its credibility, bias, framing, and missing context.
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