Image result for liberal biasAnd what’s junk news? 
According to the study, a source is junk if it “deliberately publishes misleading, deceptive or incorrect information purporting to be real news about politics, economics or culture.”
The cry of “fake news” has become a defining weapon in our hyper-partisan age. 
No doubt there has been a profusion of it as the nation’s storied newsmagazines have ceded prominence to newsfeed-optimized content factories. 
But “fake news” is also an accusation of moral turpitude. 
Its scarlet letter signifies that a journalist is not merely wrong—he’s a liar.
...As worded, that standard feels easy to abuse, but what results did it produce? 
The scientists’ criteria yielded 91 sites positively identified as junk news. 
Of these, 78 featured right-leaning content, 10 were apolitical, and a grand total of three—Mediaite, Occupy Democrats, and Shareblue—were left-leaning.
Maybe junk news sites mostly don’t exist on the left? 
The fact that the authors named three left-of-center sites could indicate that they scoured the internet and found only a few offenders. 
More likely is that it shows the opposite...
...Maybe these sites were able to escape scrutiny because the “criteria” the Oxford researchers used to tell if a site is real or fake are not criteria at all. 
They’re flexible enough to produce any result deemed desirable in advance. 
A determination that a site’s reporting is “biased,” “uses emotionally driven language,” and fails to employ journalistic “best practices” earns it the junk label..."
Read it all!