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Is Betteridge's law of headlines correct?

calmerthanyouare.org

28 points by dundun 11 years ago · 16 comments

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nirvanis 11 years ago

No.

rflrob 11 years ago

> We’re going to go out on a limb here and guesstimate that the remaining “maybe” answers can, given enough time and effort, be turned into “yes” or “no” answers, and that these will be distributed similarly to the 20:17 ratio of the fully answered headlines.

The OP does admit to going out on a limb, but I don't think this is a justified assumption. Without having seen the headlines in question, I would guess they are in the maybe category because they are dubious at best.

codezero 11 years ago

The title sets us up for contradiction! If it's correct then the answer to this post is Yes, which contradicts Betteridge's law, so the answer must be No. :)

edit: I didn't think this was controversial or anything, it was meant to be playful, sorry HN, I'll take my downvote lumps I guess.

et2o 11 years ago

I love this idea. 30s ago I just read an NYT headline "Are wearable devices worse for you than cigarettes?"

No.

ConfuciusSay 11 years ago

Now do one about Moore's law.

Dewie 11 years ago

I don't get it. If you have a headline that forces you to actually read the article to find out what it's talking about, or what the answer is, then people complain about "click bait".

If you use some kind of predictable cliché for your title, then articles like "Is X the new most dangerous thing?" isn't clickbait anymore - it's just "X is not the most dangerous thing (contrary to whatever belief/myth/contemporary opinion)". It's predictable and straightforward. And yet, that's apparently yet another reason for people to complain.

durzagott 11 years ago

I'm sure Betteridge's Law could be applied much more effectively to American news headlines than anything else. For example, how many times do we see crazy headlines on Fox News like "Is Obama a gay communist terrorist?"

  • cratermoon 11 years ago

    Indeed that is possibly the main driver for question-type headlines. Any crazy, even libelous, statement can be slipped in if it's worded as a question. The media outlets that rely on them are taking advantage of the biases of their readers, who will, at best, gloss over the text that might say "no", and simply fixate on the question as if it were a valid one. This famously led to the Glenn Beck situation of "We're not saying he's guilty, but he won't deny it!". http://gawker.com/5355901/glenn-beck-pr-genius-spreads-the-f...

  • jessaustin 11 years ago

    You only see them if you're watching Fox News.

  • krazydad 11 years ago

    I think the law is a commentary on a certain kind of headline: a polar question where the implications would be deeply disturbing if the answer were yes.

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