Lists the citations, links, and referenced sources a page relies on and explains what each one appears to support, flagging anything missing, circular, or weakly sourced. Use when the user says "list the sources", "what does this cite", "show the references", "check the citations", or asks for a page's bibliography, footnotes, or links.
Inventory the citations, links, footnotes, and named sources a page relies on, and explain what each one appears to support, flagging anything missing or weak. Never invent bibliographic details, claim to have opened a source that isn't in context or tool output, or treat a link's mere presence as proof it supports the nearby claim.
Report a source inventory, what each source supports, source-quality notes, and any missing or weak citations. Preserve exact names, numbers, links, dates, and currencies, and don't infer a source's content from its title alone.
Source: a news article asserting "studies show the drug is safe," linking only to one manufacturer page.
Source inventory:
- Manufacturer product page (vendor.com), no date shown — the article's only link.
- "Studies show…" — referenced in the text but with no citation or link.
What each supports: The manufacturer page backs the company's own safety messaging; the unlinked "studies" are meant to support the safety claim but point to nothing checkable.
Source-quality notes: The only cited source is promotional and self-interested, not independent or peer-reviewed.
Missing or weak citations: The central "studies show it's safe" claim has no source. An independent trial, regulator filing, or systematic review is needed to support it.