Deep Background GPT Released
The world's best AI fact-checking tool is now available to all as a completely free GPT
Update: People rightly asked me for an introduction for people who have never used SIFT Toolbox. Here it is — I just released a non-hallucinating rigorous AI-based fact-checker that anyone can use for free. And I don’t say that lightly: I literally co-wrote the book on using the internet to verify things. All you do is log into ChatGPT, click the link below, and put in a sentence or paragraph for it to fact check.
https://chatgpt.com/g/g-684fa334fb0c8191910d50a70baad796-deep-background-fact-checks-and-context?model=o3
When you get there you should see this or something similar:
If you don’t try clicking the link again — sometimes after logging in ChatGPT gets a bit lost.
You can click on one of the example prompts if you don’t know what to ask it to check. After its initial check, type “another round”. Watch it double-check its check. When that’s done, type “context report” for a nice little summary. You’re done.
For instance, there’s a story in Education Week just out that says that playing chess can boost performance in other academic subjects. Is that true? First, make sure you are using o3:
Type it in the claim and submit:
It will generate a list of facts from common assumptions, and return clarifications and source links for them all:
It will identify what it believes may be errors, and show the sources that seem to conflict with the claims:
It will give you a corrections summary:
I could go on — it gives you a lot:
Please note you don’t need to read all of this. If you want to scroll down to what a fact-checker might say, or just the “Revised Summary” you can. The core of this product is that I force it to “show its work” but it’s up to you how much you want to check that work.
After you get this, type and submit the phrase “another round” which will try to “fact-check the fact-check” and see if it missed anything. It will let you know whether going deeper found stuff that changed the initial assessment — or just reinforced it:
Finally, type “context report” to get a nice succinct summary of what was found of note:
Happy checking!
Original Post
I should write more about this later. It’s taken four hours to whittle down a version of SIFT Toolbox that can fit into a GPT and still function correctly, but I think I have done it. I did this because GPTs now let you choose any model so it can run on o3.
What this means is you no longer need to download a prompt and put it in a project and give Claude $20 a month. It’s now free to all. You just need to go here:
https://chatgpt.com/g/g-684fa334fb0c8191910d50a70baad796-deep-background-fact-checks-and-context?model=o3
That means, also, that you can send your friends, family, and students there as well. For free.
It is not the full SIFT Toolbox: I have tried to get it as close as I could, while paring it down by more than two-thirds (from about 3,300 words to 1,100). I needed to do that because of limits on ChatGPT instruction length. But I think it’s still the best fact-checker/contextualization tool on the AI market. If you hadn’t already used to Toolbox, I doubt you’d notice.
One note — because I had to make difficult decisions I pulled *all* of the image analysis instructions out — it can still do OCR on screenshots but won’t source images anymore. It’s a text fact-checker.
I am still mourning all the stuff I had to take out. I still vastly prefer its performance on Claude. But I think this is going to open it to a dramatically larger audience. It’s the start of a beautiful friendship.
If there was ever a post to share and restack widely, this is it.
Spread the word!
This is a great tool! I especially appreciate the "potential leads" section and think that might be useful for teaching students about research projects. This was my own attempt, testing a claim on the 5 paragraph essay: https://chatgpt.com/share/6852e325-e954-800e-bf41-c8a2d2623f94 Thank you for sharing!
Thank you for bringing the toolbox to ChatGPT. I know cutting your prompt down by two-thirds must have been tough. Losing the part where GPT analyzes photos isn’t ideal, but as you mentioned in the blog post, the toolbox is now available to a much wider audience. That’s a big plus.
Hopefully you’ll make another toolbox that focuses on image analysis. In my experience, giving ChatGPT a specific task or even a smaller subtask often helps it work better.