• Aurenkin@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    The placement of the yellow dot is determined through a composite score derived from four distinct categories: Biased Wording/Headlines, Factual/ Sourcing, Story Choices, and Political Affiliation. Each category is rated on a scale of 0 to 10, with 0. indicating a lack of bias and 10 representing extreme bias. The average of these four scores is then plotted on the scale to indicate the source’s overall Left-Right bias.

    I wouldn’t call picking four numbers 'a whole lot more ’ personally. If you actually read some of the bias analysis it becomes more obvious how arbitrary it is.

    • ChonkyOwlbear@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      The rubric is literally right below what you quoted

      The categories are as follows:

      1. Biased Wording/Headlines- Does the source use loaded words to convey emotion to sway the reader. Do headlines match the story?

      2. Factual/Sourcing- Does the source report factually and back up claims with well-sourced evidence.

      3. Story Choices: Does the source report news from both sides, or do they only publish one side.

      4. Political Affiliation: How strongly does the source endorse a particular political ideology? Who do the owners support or donate to?

      Just because it is a qualitative and not a quantitative assessment doesn’t mean it’s arbitrary.