Learn / Evidence
Learn to check the public record yourself.
Evidence is not something you are handed. It is something you verify. This wing teaches one skill: how to take a claim, find its source, and decide for yourself whether the two agree. We hold our own work to the same test.
The investigation
The Big Tech accountability series.
A twelve-part investigation into how value gets pulled away from the people who make it, published across six languages. It reads as a story, but it is built like a case file: each claim sits next to the document it came from.
Twelve parts
Six languages
Sources first
We name extraction plainly. What is manufactured can be dismantled, and the first step is seeing it clearly.
The Evidence Explorer
A trail you can walk on your own.
The Evidence Explorer is the open companion to the series. It gathers the sources in one place so you do not have to take our reading on faith. Follow a claim to its document, read the document, and judge the claim against it. When a claim does not hold, you should be able to find that out faster than we can hide it.
How to check
Three steps, and they work on anyone.
This is the method behind the series, written plainly so you can use it everywhere, including here.
- 01
Start with a claim
Pick one statement you want to test. Not the headline, the specific thing. A number, a date, a quote, a decision. - 02
Open the source
Follow it back to where it came from: the filing, the transcript, the public document. The Evidence Explorer holds the trail in one place. - 03
Read it yourself
Decide whether the source says what the claim says. If it does not, the claim fails. That is the whole test, and it works on us too.
The same test runs on us. Every funded engagement sends $200 outward, and you can read the receipt rather than trust the claim.
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