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Social Radar

Social Radar is the specialist surface for social evidence.

It differs from Live Pulse by emphasizing source identity, reliability, rumor triage, and social-specific filters.

Users can switch between:

  • Clusters: grouped social developments.
  • Events: individual social signals.

The selected view is remembered locally.

Social Radar supports a three-dimensional filter model:

  • source;
  • entity;
  • importance.

A dedicated control can hide items classified as rumors or low-reliability social evidence.

Each event or cluster receives a visible assessment derived from factors such as:

  • confidence;
  • source identity and verification;
  • cross-source corroboration;
  • number and diversity of supporting observations.

The badge can distinguish more reliable evidence from rumor-like or uncertain material. It is not an endorsement of the claim.

An event inspector can include:

  • assessment and reason;
  • normalized detail;
  • entity and source metadata;
  • original source link;
  • raw structured payload when appropriate.

A cluster inspector provides:

  • summary;
  • entities;
  • source breakdown;
  • aggregate importance and confidence;
  • member events.

A social cluster can become the scope of narrative-focused Deep Research. The page can also link to the latest related research when available.

Social Radar is most useful for determining:

  • who is making a claim;
  • whether multiple independent sources support it;
  • whether the discussion is growing;
  • whether the social signal connects to news, filings, market data, or on-chain activity;
  • whether the evidence justifies further research.

High engagement without corroboration should remain a social-attention signal, not a confirmed financial fact.