FactPage

About FactPage

Public proof receipts for disputed claims.

FactPage turns shaky claims into shareable receipts with a verdict, source trail, comeback text, and a Base-ready fingerprint.

Mission

End arguments with receipts, not vibes.

FactPage makes one small public object for one disputed claim, so people can inspect the answer and share it without rebuilding the whole argument.

How it works

One claim becomes one receipt.

01Paste a claim

Use the exact claim someone is arguing about, not a vague topic.

02$0.99 receipt

Run one paid check to create a public proof link for that claim.

03Copy the comeback

Use the short reply, verdict, and source trail in the thread.

04Keep the record

The receipt URL stays shareable, searchable, and inspectable.

Receipt vs chat

A good answer is not enough. It needs to travel.

Shareable

A private answer trapped in your chat.

A public URL someone else can open.
Paste-ready

A reply you still have to package and defend.

A receipt with verdict, comeback text, and sources together.
Provenance

An answer that can be edited without a public trail.

A fingerprint that can be timestamped on Base.

$0.99

You are buying a public receipt, not a trivia answer.

The paid run creates a specific proof link for a specific argument. Free receipts stay free once they are public, so the archive gets more useful over time.

Base-ready proof

Base timestamps the receipt fingerprint. It does not decide truth.

Hash + timestamp. Content stays off-chain.
  • Base does not decide what is true.
  • Only a content fingerprint and timestamp belong on-chain.
  • The readable receipt, claim, and sources stay off-chain on FactPage.
  • A later edit should not quietly pretend to be the original receipt.

Limits

Receipts should be inspectable, not mystical.

FactPage can be wrong. Sources can be incomplete. Claims can be badly framed. That is why receipts expose the reasoning, links, and limits instead of asking people to trust a private answer.

FAQ

Questions people ask before they trust a receipt.

Product

What FactPage is, what a receipt is, and when it is useful.

What is FactPage?

FactPage turns a disputed claim into a public proof receipt: a verdict, source trail, copy-ready comeback text, and a shareable link.

What is a proof receipt?

A proof receipt is a stable public page for one claim. It shows the claim, the answer, the reasoning, the sources, and text you can send back.

Is FactPage a fact-checking site?

Not exactly. FactPage is a proof-link generator for moments when someone needs a sourced answer fast.

What kinds of claims work best?

Claims people argue about online work best: AI detector accusations, scam texts, privacy myths, public claims, and source disputes.

What does comeback mean?

It means a short reply you can paste into a thread, email, DM, Reddit comment, or argument.

Pricing

Why one receipt costs money and why public receipts can be reused.

Why pay $0.99?

You are paying to generate a specific public proof link, not to read general facts. The paid run creates the receipt, comeback text, and source trail for that claim.

What do I get after paying?

You get a verdict, copy-ready comeback text, a source trail, a public URL, and a receipt fingerprint that can be verified later.

Are free receipts really free?

Yes. Once a receipt is public, other people can open it free. Search free receipts before paying for a new one.

Why search existing receipts first?

If someone already paid for a similar claim, you may be able to use the public receipt without paying again.

Trust

How receipts should be read, challenged, and corrected.

Why not just ask ChatGPT, Claude, or Grok?

A chatbot answer lives in a private chat. FactPage creates a public receipt you can send to another person and inspect later.

Does FactPage guarantee the truth?

No. FactPage shows the claim, reasoning, sources, and limits so people can inspect the answer instead of trusting a black box.

How are sources chosen?

FactPage prefers primary, official, and directly relevant sources when they are available.

Can a receipt be wrong?

Yes. Any public proof system needs correction paths. Receipts should be inspectable, challengeable, and clear about their limits.

Can a receipt be updated?

Corrections can happen, but material changes should be visible. The product is designed around public receipts, not quiet rewrites.

Base / onchain

What the chain proves, what stays off-chain, and why it matters.

Why put anything on Base?

Base can timestamp a receipt fingerprint so the record is harder to quietly rewrite later. The chain does not decide whether the claim is true.

What goes on-chain?

Only a hash and timestamp. The readable claim, sources, and receipt content stay on FactPage.

Does the blockchain store my text?

No. Content stays off-chain. The chain stores a fingerprint that can be matched against the receipt.

What is Base-ready proof?

It means the receipt has a content hash that can be sealed on Base for timestamped verification.

What is Sealed on Base?

It means a receipt fingerprint was actually submitted to Base and has a transaction record.

Does an onchain seal prove the claim is true?

No. It proves that a fingerprint existed at a certain time. The sources still carry the factual burden.

Why does this matter for AI-generated receipts?

AI content can be edited silently. A public fingerprint gives a generated receipt a stronger provenance trail.

Can I verify a receipt myself?

Yes. Sealed receipts can link to the transaction and show the matching receipt hash.

Safety

Where FactPage should not be treated as a professional authority.

Is this legal, medical, or financial advice?

No. FactPage is a source-backed public receipt, not professional advice.

What should I not use FactPage for?

Do not use it for private personal attacks, doxxing, emergencies, or anything that needs a lawyer, doctor, regulator, or safety professional.

What is FactPage's mission?

FactPage exists to make online arguments easier to end with public receipts instead of vibes, screenshots, and trust me.

Make one

Turn the next shaky claim into a receipt.

About FactPage - public proof receipts for disputed claims | FactPage