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Checked on December 10, 2025
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Executive summary

Factually is a newsletter produced by the International Fact‑Checking Network and promoted on Poynter’s site as a biweekly (every other Thursday) publication; Poynter’s subscribe page explicitly states it is delivered every other Thursday at 9 a.m. Eastern [1]. Available sources do not provide evidence about whether Factually has published since the last issue the user saw; there is no reporting in the provided material that confirms recent send dates or interruptions (not found in current reporting).

1. What the publisher says about frequency

Poynter’s subscribe page for Factually describes the product as a recurring newsletter produced by the International Fact‑Checking Network and instructs readers that it is “delivered to your inbox every other Thursday at 9 a.m. Eastern time” [1]. That statement establishes the intended cadence and the organization responsible for the newsletter’s production [1].

2. What the available reporting does not say

The search results provided include the Poynter subscription page and an unrelated link to a general Yahoo/News-like domain, but none of the supplied sources contain a dates log, archive, or confirmation that a specific recent issue was sent. Consequently, available sources do not mention whether an issue has or has not gone out since the last one you saw; there is no evidence in these items to verify current production status beyond the described schedule (p1_s1; not found in current reporting).

3. How to interpret the stated cadence versus real‑world delivery

A publisher’s stated schedule establishes intent but not proof of uninterrupted delivery. Poynter’s wording that Factually is delivered “every other Thursday” is authoritative about the intended rhythm [1]. However, newsletters can still skip issues for editorial, technical or organizational reasons; the provided sources do not address exceptions, delays, or recent continuity (p1_s1; not found in current reporting).

4. Practical steps to confirm current publication

Because the supplied material lacks recent delivery data, the simplest verification actions (not covered in the provided sources) are to check: the inbox or archive for the newsletter’s sender, the Poynter or IFNC web pages for an archive or latest post, or the newsletter’s unsubscribe/resubscribe flow for the last-send timestamp. Available sources do not describe these verification methods for Factually specifically (not found in current reporting; p1_s1).

5. Competing perspectives and possible implicit agendas

Poynter is presenting Factually as a regular product of the International Fact‑Checking Network, which serves to promote fact‑checking work and media literacy; that promotional framing encourages subscription [1]. Absent other sources, there is no contradictory claim in the provided material alleging lapses or cessation, so readers must weigh Poynter’s promotional statement against the lack of third‑party confirmation in the supplied set [1].

6. Limitations of this analysis

This report relies only on the two supplied search results. The Poynter page states the intended schedule [1], but the supply of sources does not include issue archives, timestamps, or notices of disruption. Therefore I cannot confirm whether new issues have been produced since the last one you saw; that fact is not found in current reporting (p1_s1; not found in current reporting).

If you want, I can draft an email or checklist you can use to verify delivery (e.g., what headers to look for, where to find archive links) — but that would go beyond the specific material provided here.

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