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by nkozyra
3270 days ago
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Presentation of facts alone doesn't really preclude bias, though. Certainly all journalists carry bias - and styleguides and journalistic standards are intended to mitigate this - but any software intended to encapsulate some facts into some allotted space will also carry bias. Source/quote selection and omission will always lend some bias and news by nature has a finite space. Print news in particular imposes bias through strict space requirements, driven editorially. And then there's the weight of the sources quoted, defining a "side" or "angle" to a story and making sure there's balance in opposing voices, etc. I think a lot of people see bias as overt when it can be quite negligible and minor. But then they also often conflate news commentary with news. It's a pretty blurred line. That said, local news (politics, business, crime) tends to skew less toward prescribed narrative and more toward facts and points because it's often very dry. |
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"Amazon buys WF". vs "Jeff Bezos buys WF so you never have to talk to a cashier"
Or, "Physician runs over pedestrian" vs. "Physician accused of insurance fraud runs over pedestrian"