Paste any AI chatbot response and we'll scan it for fake credential claims, impersonation red flags, and missing safety disclaimers. Based on the Pennsylvania v. Character.AI lawsuit (May 2026).
If someone claims to be a licensed professional, check these real databases:
All U.S. healthcare providers (National Provider Identifier)
Physician license verification across all 50 states
Board certification status for medical specialists
Pennsylvania professional license lookup
Psychology board license verification (ASPPB)
This tool uses pattern matching to detect common credential impersonation signals in AI-generated text. It is not a substitute for professional verification.
PA Lawsuit: Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v. Character Technologies, Inc. (May 5, 2026). Filed by PA Department of State under Governor Josh Shapiro.
Key finding: A Character.AI chatbot named "Emilie" claimed to be a Doctor of psychiatry, stated it was licensed in Pennsylvania, and fabricated license number PS306189. The bot interacted with 45,000+ users.
Federal response: The AI Fraud Accountability Act of 2026 (S.3982 / H.R.7786) would make it unlawful to use AI to falsely pose as an individual with intent to defraud.
Court precedent: In May 2025, a federal judge in Orlando ruled that AI chatbots do not receive First Amendment free speech protections.