Conspiracy Generator

Step 2 — The official story

← Pick a different story

Accessory has no sleep benefits

Researchers reviewing clinical trials have found little evidence that blue‑light filtering glasses provide the sleep or short‑term eye‑comfort benefits often claimed by makers and some retailers. The review pooled data from 17 randomized trials and reported no consistent short‑term reduction in visual fatigue from computer use, and it could not show clear benefits for sleep quality, vision performance, or long‑term retinal health.

The authors noted important limitations: many studies were small, short in duration, used different lens tints or methodologies, and measured outcomes in inconsistent ways. Because of those variations the reviewers called for larger, longer, well‑designed trials to determine whether any particular type of filter helps with sleep or preserves eye health. In the meantime, experts advise established measures like reducing evening screen time and using built‑in night modes.

Source: independent.co.uk

Now pick the conspirators

Every conspiracy theory pins one culprit and one motive on the same story. The same story can spawn any number of theories — different culprits, different motives. That's part of how you spot a conspiracy theory: the same event can be "explained" any number of ways.

Culprit
Culprit
Motive
Motive
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You'll walk through the four moves on separate screens, with a debunk on every step.

Conspiracy Generator — the recipe, written out