Verified citations

AI articles with real sources

The fastest way to lose trust is a made-up statistic with a dead link. Satiara makes that impossible: it can only cite sources it just fetched and checked are real, and it only cites when the topic actually calls for it.

What you get

What it does for you

Sources only when neededA how-to about fixing a sink needs zero citations. A health or money topic needs real ones. Satiara decides from the topic, not habit.
Checked minutes before writingEvery source is fetched and verified live right before the article is written. Dead pages and 'page not found' husks never make it in.
It can't invent a linkThe writer may only cite from the checked list. Any other link is stripped out automatically before publishing. This is enforced by code, not a polite instruction.
Primary sources preferredIt follows the pages that rank to the sources they cite, government data, research bodies, official docs, instead of citing someone's blog post about a study.
How it works

Step by step

01

Decide if sources are needed

Health, money, legal, and statistics topics require them. Practical know-how doesn't get links stuffed in for show.

02

Collect and check

It gathers the references the top-ranking pages actually cite, fetches each one, and keeps only the ones that are alive and real.

03

Write with a whitelist

The writer cites only from that checked list, at most once per source, only where a claim needs backing.

04

Enforce before publish

Every link in the draft is checked against the list. Anything else is removed. The article ships with real sources or none, never fake ones.

Straight answers

Questions people ask

Why not cite sources on every article?

Because most articles don't need them, and links for links' sake look like spam. A plumber explaining how to stop a running toilet is the source. Citations appear where a claim genuinely needs proof.

Can the AI make up a study or a link?

No. It can only link to pages Satiara just fetched and verified. Anything else is stripped out by code before publishing. A hallucinated citation physically can't ship.

What if no good source exists?

Then the article states the point in plain words without a number, instead of inventing one. Honest and vague beats precise and false.

Which topics get sources?

Health, money, legal, and safety topics, plus anything built on statistics or benchmarks. Practical how-tos and local service pages don't need them, so they don't get them.

Where do the sources come from?

From the references the top-ranking pages themselves cite, with official and research sources preferred over someone's blog post about a study. Each one is fetched and checked seconds before writing.

Why does this matter for AI answers?

AI engines prefer to quote pages that back up their claims. An article with real, working sources is more likely to be the one ChatGPT and Google's AI cite.

More features

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