• @[email protected]
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    105 days ago

    Yes, please give me an example. Titles are supposed to be short and concise. The teen was shot in the face. The Title doesn’t say it was intentionally or accidentally.

    Are you saying that the title should be a paragraph long and include all details in the article?

    • @[email protected]
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      11 day ago

      It should be designed to summarize the most relevant parts of the article. In this case its designed to get an emotional response, which is manipulation.

      I will agree its not explicitly misleading, but there are better headlines for this story out there. Feel free to compare yourself.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 day ago

        Get the fuck outta here…

        Great, another article with a misleading headline,

        I will agree its not explicitly misleading

        You can’t have it both ways is it misleading or not?

        • @[email protected]
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          113 hours ago

          Explicitly means it literally says misleading words. Implicitly means it leaves out relevant words.

          Its like lieing by omission.

          In my opinion its misleading, but maybe I just have an awful time parsing headlines.

          • @[email protected]
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            9 hours ago

            You can’t offer a better headline. And you admit its not misleading. Take L and move on. I’m not going to search. It’s your argument to prove. I feel it’s accurate. It’s not misleading; the title is accurate.

            https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/misleading

            It, misleading, means to be deceptive, imo, the headline is not deceptive.

            Edit also trying to change what you originally said. You didn’t say it wasn’t implicit.