I built Pino to cut through misinformation. This Chrome extension fact-checks claims instantly using AI, providing multiple sources and a truth score. Whether you’re reading news, or researching, Pino helps you separate fact from fiction in seconds.
Fact check highlighted text on the internet with AI
I built Pino to cut through misinformation. This Chrome extension fact-checks claims instantly using AI, providing multiple sources and a truth score. Whether you’re reading news, or researching, Pino helps you separate fact from fiction in seconds.
Building something from scratch means the world to me. I’ve always seen devs as modern sorcerers: a few keystrokes and something magical pops out. The first time I prompted an AI felt like stumbling into the App Store circa 2009. Back then I was way too young to think like a creator; I just main‑lined shiny new apps. I didn’t realize how badly I wanted to make until I opened an AI‑powered IDE. Once it turned fully agentic, my output exploded—call it a 10× buff. For the record, this ent
Real-time verification adds much-needed credibility! 😄
Congrats @iacob for your first tool. Very simple and clever idea. Perplexity rocks. I hope you will catch a lot of users today ;)
Love the energy here—especially the honesty about being "clueless and electrified." One question: how does Pino decide which sources to trust when it’s triple-checking? That judgment layer feels like the real magic.
Check the similar products section on this page, or browse the category pages linked in the tags above. Each category page shows all products for a given year, sorted by engagement.
A measure of community engagement at launch. Higher means more people noticed and interacted with the product. It's a traction signal, not a quality rating.
Discussion threads divided by interest score. Above 0.30 is strong. Below 0.15 suggests the product got clicks but not conversation.
Categories come from the product's launch tags. Most products appear in 2-3 categories. The primary category is listed first.