Sample Verification Reports
These sample investigations demonstrate how VerifiYou evaluates claims using multiple independent sources, contextual analysis, and transparent confidence scoring.
Viral Social Media Claim
Claim
“NASA confirms alien life has been discovered.”
Evidence Reviewed
✓ Reuters article
✓ NASA Newsroom
✓ Associated Press reporting
✓ Original social media post
Evidence Summary
The circulating image originated from construction work performed several years earlier.
The image was reposted without its original date.
Context
The event shown actually occurred during scheduled renovations.
The claim falsely presented an old image as a current event.
Confidence Score
15 / 100
Verdict: Misleading
The claim presents an old photograph as a current event without supporting evidence.
🟢 Investigation Complete
🟢 Evidence Review Complete
🟡 Additional Sources Recommended
🟠 Mixed Evidence 🔴 Verification Inconclusive
Links Reviewed
🟢 NASA Newsroom
Primary Source
🟢 Reuters
Independent Reporting
🟢 Associated Press
Independent Reporting
🟡 Original Facebook Post
Unverified User Content
Counter Claims
Alternative Claims Considered
• Satellite imagery appears newer…
•Some social media users interpreted the image differently…
Verdict
Insufficient evidence.

Historical Event Claim
Claim
“NASA’s Perseverance rover successfully landed on Mars on February 18, 2021.”
Evidence Reviewed
✓ NASA mission archive
✓ NASA live broadcast
✓ Jet Propulsion Laboratory
✓ Reuters
✓ Associated Press
Context
Multiple independent organizations documented the landing in real time.
Mission telemetry, images, and engineering reports are publicly available.
Confidence Score
99 / 100
Verdict
SUPPORTED
The available evidence overwhelmingly confirms the claim.
🟢 Investigation Complete
🟢 Multiple Independent Sources
🟢 Primary Sources Confirmed
🟢 Evidence Consistent
Links Reviewed
🟢 NASA Mission Archive — Primary Source
🟢 Jet Propulsion Laboratory
🟢 Reuters
🟢 Associated Press
Alternative Claims Considered
Some users questioned whether the landing footage was authentic.
No credible evidence supporting those claims was found.

Medical Cure Claim
Claim
“A newly discovered rainforest plant cures Alzheimer’s disease.”
Evidence Reviewed
✓ Early laboratory research
✓ One university study
✗ No human clinical trials
✗ No medical consensus
Confidence
45/100
Verdict
INSUFFICIENT EVIDENCE
The available evidence is promising but insufficient to support the claim.
🟡 Additional Sources Recommended
🟡 Ongoing Research
🟠 Mixed Evidence
Research Summary
🟡 University laboratory study
🟡 Preliminary research publication
🔴 No peer-reviewed clinical trials
🔴 No independent medical consensus
Context
Laboratory studies indicate the compound may warrant further investigation, but there is currently insufficient clinical evidence to conclude it is an effective treatment for Alzheimer’s disease.
