Clear-Sight lives in your browser. Every article you read can be scored, explained, and researched — without leaving the page. Your profile tracks how your reading stacks up. Quizzes reinforce what you learn. And soon, every story you analyze will be saved in a connected web of storylines and entities.
Click the Clear-Sight icon on any news article to open the sidebar. In under thirty seconds, you get the full picture — ten scored signals, plain-language explanations, and the research tools to go deeper.
Every article is scored across all ten framework signals — Balance, Logic, Autonomy, Evidence, Sourcing, Specificity, Consistency, Nuance, Context, and Claims. A composite score gives you the quick read. Individual scores give you the deeper one.
The Review translates the scores into a guided media literacy lesson — specific to this article. What the framing choices mean, why they matter, and how the article could have served the reader differently. Not a verdict on the journalism. A lesson in how to read it.
Every article leaves threads worth pulling. Clear-Sight surfaces them — missing context, claims that deserve scrutiny, a timeline of how the story unfolded, and the perspectives that were left out entirely. The starting point for knowing what to look for next.
When the analysis surfaces questions worth exploring, Ask Clear-Sight takes the next step. It searches across current reporting and returns a structured, multi-source view — additional perspectives, missing context, and independent data to evaluate the claims yourself.
Your profile is your personal reading dashboard. It tracks every article you analyze and shows you how your reading habits measure against the framework — across multiple levels.
See your total articles analyzed, your average composite score, and how your reading has trended over time. A clear picture of where you are and how you are progressing.
Which outlets are you reading? How concentrated is your media diet? Your profile tracks the sources you analyze and shows whether your reading represents a range of perspectives or clusters around a few.
See how the articles you read score across all ten signals. Discover whether the journalism you consume tends to be strong in evidence but weak in nuance, or well-sourced but low on balance. The patterns in your reading tell a story of their own.
Every article you analyze is saved. Revisit any past analysis, compare scores across articles, and track how coverage of the same story varies across different outlets.
Clear-Sight is not just a tool you use. It is a skill you build. Two self-assessment experiences help you internalize the framework so that you carry it with you — whether the extension is open or not.
How do you relate to the news? This self-assessment explores your habits, assumptions, and emotional responses to media. It is not a test — it is a mirror. The results help you understand the lens you bring to everything you read, so you can be more intentional about how you engage.
Can you spot the patterns without the tool? This quiz tests your ability to apply the Clear-Sight Analytical Framework to real article excerpts. It reinforces what you have learned — the signals, the patterns, the construction choices — so that the skill lives in you, not just in the extension.
Every article you analyze becomes part of a larger picture. Storylines connect your articles into the threads of news you follow. Entity research shows you how the people, organizations, and places in your reading shape the journalism itself.
Every article you analyze is saved into a storyline — a connected thread of coverage around the same topic or event. Track how a story evolves over time. See which outlets covered it, how their scores compared, and where the narrative shifted. Your reading becomes a map of the stories you follow.
Discover how the people, organizations, and places in the news affect the journalism itself. When an article features certain entities — a political figure, a corporation, an institution — do the scores shift? Entity research lets you see the patterns. For instance, articles featuring a specific world leader may consistently score lower in Balance and Nuance. That is not a verdict on the person. It is a pattern in the coverage worth understanding.
See the web of connections between the stories you read and the entities within them. Which people appear together? Which organizations cluster around certain topics? The knowledge graph turns your reading history into a visual map of how news coverage connects — entities, storylines, and score patterns, all in one view.
Install Clear-Sight, analyze your first article, and see the framework in action. Free to start. Built to grow with you.