• @[email protected]
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    158 months ago

    When one says a publication is grossly misleading, it certainly implies the entire publication

    • @Chocrates
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      148 months ago

      Often the author doesn’t write he headline. Not sure it matters but most a bit of info.

      • Cosmic Cleric
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        48 months ago

        You’re not wrong, but we also should stop excusing, normalizing, and accepting wildly exaggerated for sales purposes titles of articles.

        • @[email protected]
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          18 months ago

          We should stop accepting lies.

          Unless there is some way this reaction actually did produce twice the energy input, it’s not misleading it’s a lie.

    • The Snark Urge
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      118 months ago

      Why have we accepted the standard of misleading headlines? “Oh well you didn’t read the article, I guess you and 90% of eyeballs get to be fundamentally misinformed” is an unhinged take.

      • @[email protected]
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        48 months ago

        I never said a misleading headline was acceptable. I said the publication is not misleading and that it covers the criticisms dude up above was leveling.

        • @aidan
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          28 months ago

          It is misleading, for someone to be misleading they must mislead, and the headline misleads.

          • @Cryophilia
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            38 months ago

            No, this is a popular science article, not an actual publication.

    • @Cryophilia
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      58 months ago

      “article” vs “publication”

      Two different things.

      The link takes you to an article. Publications are in actual scientific journals, not intended for popular consumption.