Sentences with phrase «piece of fake news»

Fox News is carefully choosing the stories to cover, and the kinds of words it uses to cover those stories, to shape an alternate reality in which Trump's alleged affair with a porn star is yet another piece of fake news.

Not exact matches

They've included mandatory daily terrorism stories, hit pieces on Hillary Clinton, and forceful denunciations of «fake news,» a term with which we are all by now deeply familiar.
Appearing somewhat sympathetic to the Babylon Bee, Snopes said: «Although it should have been obvious that the Babylon Bee piece was just a spoof of the ongoing political brouhaha over alleged news media «bias» and «fake news,» some readers missed that aspect of the article and interpreted it literally.
My definition of «data» was inclusive: the piece wove the DNC VoteBuilder data breach, Clinton's email server, Russian hacks and fake news into a narrative about political data gone bad, ending with something you might hear in a freshman philosophy class:
There are several key questions students can ask when presented with any new piece of information that can help identify what is or isn't fake news:
Recipient of the $ 100,000 Bucksbaum Award for his challenging biennial installation Claim, which presented 2,755 slices of baloney with photocopy portraits that claimed to represent the Jewish population of New York City, Pope.L served up a piece of work that brought the question of fake news home.
Snapchat's human editorial and moderation team will look at every piece of content it shows in Discover to make sure it's high - quality, brand - safe and not fake news.
In the months before the 2016 election, before the term «fake news» became ubiquitous, if a user wasn't flagging a piece of content, it would likely continue to exist on Facebook.
After a barrage of criticism over its inability — and apparent lack of concern — in stopping fake news flooding its platform both during and after the 2016 US presidential election, Facebook got its Christmas gift early — a soft, puff piece in the Australian Financial Review that paints it as a crusader against the spread of incorrect information.
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