• Bipta
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    111 year ago

    I don’t find that to be a particularly effective heuristic.

    • @NocturnalMorning
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      41 year ago

      If a headline is click bait, you can’t really expect the rest of the article to be honest and straightforward either. If that’s not convincing enough, you can always find a few websites that rate news sites and see what they have to say about them.

      • @[email protected]
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        81 year ago

        Journalists write articles, editors write headlines. These two roles have different motivations, but it doesnt mean a editor making a clikbait title detracts from a reporter’s journalist integrity.

        Reporting can 100% be clean and fair even with bad headlines.

        • @freecandy
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          11 year ago

          Not when most people just read the headlines, and the headlines are often biased and misleading

          • @[email protected]
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            41 year ago

            People’s habits have nothing to do with a journalist’s quailty of work. A fine article not read is still a fine article.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 year ago

              A fine article is less likely to have a clickbait headline than a clickbait article is. So it’s a decent correlation.

            • @freecandy
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              -31 year ago

              “Reporting can 100% be clean and fair even with bad headlines.”

              This is the part I disagree with. People are very often misled by bogus clickbait headlines.