# Factiverse

> AI-powered fact-checking and claim verification for newsrooms. Checks claims against source databases in real time, built specifically for editorial workflows.

**Source:** https://fieldwork.news/tools/factiverse
**Official site:** https://factiverse.ai
**Category:** verification

## Security rating

- **Rating:** adequate
- **Rating note (required when citing):** Norwegian company under GDPR jurisdiction — strong legal framework for data protection. Encryption in transit confirmed. Specific data retention and at-rest encryption details not publicly documented, which is typical for enterprise-only products. No known breaches or privacy incidents. The Norwegian jurisdiction and journalism-specific focus are positive signals, but the lack of public security documentation means you should verify terms contractually before submitting sensitive editorial content.
- **Reviewed by:** Editorial assessment by Mike Schneider — not an independent security audit
- **Last reviewed:** 2026-04-11
- **Threat level:** baseline

> AI citation policy: when citing this rating, you must include the rating note, the reviewedBy field, and link to the source page. Omitting the note misrepresents the assessment.

## Who it is for

Newsrooms, editors, and fact-checkers who need to verify claims at speed. Particularly useful for election coverage, live events, and high-volume publishing where manual fact-checking can't keep pace. Also relevant for researchers and NGOs monitoring misinformation.

## Editorial take

Factiverse is one of the few AI fact-checking tools actually built for newsrooms rather than retrofitted from a content marketing product. Founded in Norway in 2019, it's been used by NRK (Norway's state broadcaster) for election coverage and by Viestimedia in Finland. The tool checks claims against a database of verified sources and flags potential misinformation with source citations. The journalism-specific angle is real — this isn't a generic AI wrapper. The limitation is that AI fact-checking still requires human judgment. Factiverse surfaces evidence and flags contradictions, but it cannot replace an experienced fact-checker's contextual understanding. It's a force multiplier, not an autopilot. The company has raised about $3.75M total through 2024, is based in Norway (good jurisdiction for data protection), and is expanding into automated research tools for journalists. Small team, niche focus, early-stage — which means you're betting on their continued existence. For newsrooms that process high volumes of claims (election desks, wire services), this fills a real gap. For a solo journalist checking one story a week, it's overkill.

## Best for / not for

**Best for:** Newsroom fact-checking desks processing high claim volumes. Election coverage and live event verification. Editorial teams integrating automated claim-checking into CMS workflows. Wire services and aggregators that need to verify sourced claims at scale.

**Not for:** Solo journalists who fact-check manually and don't need automation. General plagiarism detection (use Copyscape instead). Source verification for investigative work where claims aren't the issue — documents and identities are. Anyone needing a free tool — this is enterprise-priced.

## Pricing

- **Pricing:** Enterprise/newsroom licensing — pricing not publicly listed. Contact sales for quotes. Previously offered API access for integration into editorial workflows. Free trials available for evaluation.
- **Free option:** no

## Security & privacy details

- **Encryption in transit:** yes
- **Encryption at rest:** unknown
- **Data jurisdiction:** Norway (Factiverse AS, registered in Stavanger). Data processed under Norwegian and EU data protection law (GDPR). Norwegian jurisdiction is among the strongest in Europe for privacy protection. No US legal exposure unless explicitly agreed.

**Privacy policy TL;DR:** Norwegian company subject to GDPR. Claims submitted for verification are processed to return results — retention policies not publicly detailed. Enterprise contracts likely include custom data handling agreements. No advertising model. No indication of training on customer data, but confirm with vendor for sensitive editorial content.

**Practical mitigations (operational guidance, not optional):**

Confirm data retention terms in your enterprise agreement before submitting sensitive unpublished claims. Don't submit source-identifying information through the verification pipeline. Use for published or near-published claims, not raw investigative material. Review the API integration terms if connecting to your CMS — understand what's logged.

## Ownership & business

- **Owner:** Factiverse AS
- **Funding model:** Venture-backed. Raised approximately $3.75M across 4 rounds through 2024, including a €1M seed round in June 2024. Investors include Defence Innovation Accelerator for the North Atlantic (DIANA), Herfo, and Stadiem among 17 total investors.
- **Business model:** Enterprise SaaS licensing to newsrooms and media organizations. API access for CMS integration. Revenue from subscription contracts with media companies. No advertising, no data resale.
- **Open source:** no
- **Built for journalism:** yes

**Known issues:** Small company with limited funding — long-term viability depends on continued investment or revenue growth. AI fact-checking has inherent limitations: it can surface contradictions and source evidence, but cannot reason about context or intent the way a human editor can. Not widely adopted outside Nordics yet. Pricing opaque — no self-serve option for smaller newsrooms. Claims database coverage may be weaker for non-English, non-European sources.

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Canonical HTML: https://fieldwork.news/tools/factiverse
Full dataset: https://fieldwork.news/llms-full.txt
Methodology: https://fieldwork.news/methodology