Summate.it vs Relativity
Side-by-side comparison to help you choose.
| Feature | Summate.it | Relativity |
|---|---|---|
| Type | Web App | Product |
| UnfragileRank | 32/100 | 35/100 |
| Adoption | 0 | 0 |
| Quality | 0 | 1 |
| Ecosystem | 0 |
| 0 |
| Match Graph | 0 | 0 |
| Pricing | Free | Paid |
| Capabilities | 11 decomposed | 13 decomposed |
| Times Matched | 0 | 0 |
Accepts web article URLs via direct URL pattern manipulation (summate.it/[domain]/[path]) or form input, fetches remote article content server-side, extracts article text using undocumented content extraction logic, and passes normalized text to OpenAI API for summarization. Returns plain-text summary without requiring user account creation or login, enabling single-click summarization workflows from browser address bar or bookmarklet-style URL rewrites.
Unique: Eliminates authentication entirely for initial use, allowing URL-pattern-based access (summate.it/domain/path) that works without account creation or login, contrasting with competitors like Reeder, Feedly, or Pocket that require signup before any summarization
vs alternatives: Faster time-to-value than account-based summarizers (no signup friction), but trades persistent history and customization for immediate accessibility
Routes extracted article text to OpenAI API for summarization using an unspecified model version (likely GPT-3.5-turbo or GPT-4, unknown from documentation). Implements server-side prompt engineering with fixed summarization instructions (not publicly documented), handles token counting and truncation for articles exceeding OpenAI context windows, and returns single-pass summaries without iterative refinement or user-controlled abstraction levels.
Unique: Uses OpenAI API as black-box summarization engine with server-side prompt engineering, but provides zero transparency into model version, prompt design, or token handling — users cannot inspect or customize the summarization logic
vs alternatives: Leverages OpenAI's general-purpose summarization capability (better than rule-based extractive summarization), but lacks the customization depth of tools like Anthropic Claude or open-source models that expose prompt control
No documented language support for input articles or output summaries. Unknown whether service supports non-English articles, whether summaries are generated in source language or translated to English, or whether users can request output in different languages. Language handling is completely opaque.
Unique: Provides no documentation of language support, leaving non-English users to discover limitations through trial and error — this is a significant gap for international users
vs alternatives: Simpler to operate than multilingual services (no language detection or translation overhead), but unusable for non-English content
Implements server-side HTTP fetching of remote URLs, extracts article text from HTML using undocumented content extraction library (likely Readability, Trafilatura, or similar), normalizes whitespace and formatting, and filters out boilerplate (navigation, ads, metadata). Handles HTTP redirects, character encoding detection, and basic error handling for unreachable or malformed URLs, but provides no visibility into extraction success rates or failure modes.
Unique: Performs server-side extraction rather than client-side (avoiding JavaScript execution complexity), but hides extraction implementation details entirely — users cannot see which library is used, how extraction rules are configured, or why extraction fails on specific sites
vs alternatives: More reliable than regex-based extraction for diverse HTML structures, but less transparent than tools like Readability.js (which expose extraction logic) or Mercury Parser (which document their algorithm)
Generates summaries on-demand without storing results, user preferences, or session state. Each URL summarization is independent — no caching of repeated URLs, no user account to track history, no saved summaries for later retrieval. Implements stateless HTTP request-response pattern where summary is returned once and discarded unless user manually saves it.
Unique: Explicitly trades user convenience (no history, no personalization) for privacy and simplicity — no user database, no session management, no data retention beyond single request-response cycle
vs alternatives: Simpler privacy model than account-based summarizers (Pocket, Instapaper, Feedly), but sacrifices the convenience of saved summaries and reading history that power users expect
Implements authentication wall that blocks access to features documentation, pricing details, API specifications, and advanced options until user signs up. Pricing page, features page, and technical documentation are all behind login, preventing public evaluation of capabilities, cost structure, or integration options. Forces users to commit to account creation before understanding what paid tiers offer or what limitations exist.
Unique: Deliberately hides all substantive product information (pricing, features, API docs) behind authentication, preventing public evaluation and comparison — this is a business decision, not a technical capability, but it significantly impacts user trust and discoverability
vs alternatives: Increases signup conversion by forcing commitment before revealing limitations, but reduces transparency compared to competitors like Reeder, Feedly, or Pocket that publish pricing and features publicly
No documented capability to customize summary length, abstraction level, or output format. Service appears to generate fixed-length summaries (exact length unknown) using fixed prompt instructions (not publicly documented). No options for bullet-point summaries, executive summaries, detailed summaries, or tone customization. One-size-fits-all approach with no user control over output parameters.
Unique: Intentionally omits customization options to maintain simplicity and reduce UI complexity — this is a design choice prioritizing ease-of-use over flexibility, but it limits usefulness for diverse use cases
vs alternatives: Simpler UX than customizable summarizers (Claude, ChatGPT), but less useful for workflows requiring specific summary formats or lengths
No documented API, webhook, or programmatic access method. Service appears to be web-only with no REST API, GraphQL endpoint, or SDK for integration into other applications. No batch processing capability, no scheduled summarization, no integration with content management systems, RSS readers, or note-taking apps. Cannot be embedded or called from external tools.
Unique: Deliberately restricts access to web interface only, preventing programmatic integration or automation — this simplifies infrastructure but eliminates use cases requiring API access or batch processing
vs alternatives: Simpler to operate than API-first services (no rate limiting, quota management, or authentication complexity), but unusable for developers building integrations or automation workflows
+3 more capabilities
Automatically categorizes and codes documents based on learned patterns from human-reviewed samples, using machine learning to predict relevance, privilege, and responsiveness. Reduces manual review burden by identifying documents that match specified criteria without human intervention.
Ingests and processes massive volumes of documents in native formats while preserving metadata integrity and creating searchable indices. Handles format conversion, deduplication, and metadata extraction without data loss.
Provides tools for organizing and retrieving documents during depositions and trial, including document linking, timeline creation, and quick-search capabilities. Enables attorneys to rapidly locate supporting documents during proceedings.
Manages documents subject to regulatory requirements and compliance obligations, including retention policies, audit trails, and regulatory reporting. Tracks document lifecycle and ensures compliance with legal holds and preservation requirements.
Manages multi-reviewer document review workflows with task assignment, progress tracking, and quality control mechanisms. Supports parallel review by multiple team members with conflict resolution and consistency checking.
Enables rapid searching across massive document collections using full-text indexing, Boolean operators, and field-specific queries. Supports complex search syntax for precise document retrieval and filtering.
Relativity scores higher at 35/100 vs Summate.it at 32/100. However, Summate.it offers a free tier which may be better for getting started.
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Identifies and flags privileged communications (attorney-client, work product) and confidential information through pattern recognition and metadata analysis. Maintains comprehensive audit trails of all access to sensitive materials.
Implements role-based access controls with fine-grained permissions at document, workspace, and field levels. Allows administrators to restrict access based on user roles, case assignments, and security clearances.
+5 more capabilities