Wikipedia:Reliable sources/Noticeboard/Archive 303

Latest comment: 4 years ago by Primefac in topic RfC: Fox News
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Hi, was confused about how the community would view the following:

Link Would this link be considered reliable? Would it count towards notability?

Thanks!

The overall source is OK; the article itself is a bit borderline in that it seems to be mostly the reporters simply repeating the words of the subject. I cannot speak to notability. Mangoe (talk) 17:13, 15 July 2020 (UTC)
Livemint is reliable, can contribute to notability but note there's a higher bar for companies and organisations, you'll need more than one article and in varied sources. Tayi Arajakate Talk 18:07, 18 July 2020 (UTC)

Recommend deprecating starsunfolded.com

I'm going to recommend that the community deprecate starsunfolded.com and add it to one of the rejected website lists, like XLinkBot Revertlist, or whatever the traditional thing to do is. It's a content-scraping site that often pops up high in Google search results, typically for Indian entertainment personalities. (Ex: Google "How tall is Digangana Suryavanshi?" There's no presumption that anyone is actively monitoring the content, and the high placement in the search results makes it an attractive site to add here. So far it looks like people have done a good job keeping it out of articles, but it wouldn't hurt to have a bot help. Ping me if you need more info. Cyphoidbomb (talk) 22:18, 17 July 2020 (UTC)

Oppose this "deprecation" system, but if there is a source that I would do it for this is a good choice. Support adding to XLinkBot Revertlist. --Emir of Wikipedia (talk) 22:26, 17 July 2020 (UTC)
Per starsunfolded.com     it appears to not be used in enwiki article space at all at the moment, though it is notable enought that it has been discussed on this noticeboard in 2016 and 2019, so it is probably worth a Perennial sources entry. I don't think it's worth adding to any list if use isn't significant enough that references to it can be easily removed manually. Hemiauchenia (talk) 22:27, 17 July 2020 (UTC)
Not as far as I can tell, a ctrl f of MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist for starsunfolded came up with nothing. Hemiauchenia (talk) 22:42, 17 July 2020 (UTC)
Support revertlisting or at least blacklisting - the reason "it appears to not be used in enwiki article space at all at the moment" is because it is on my search list - I remove 3-4 a week - Arjayay (talk) 12:30, 18 July 2020 (UTC)
I have added a perennial sources entry for this website. Hemiauchenia (talk) 14:38, 18 July 2020 (UTC)
I don't think we should add obscure sites like these to the perennial list, spam-blacklist should suffice and would be more effective at preventing its use. Tayi Arajakate Talk 19:28, 18 July 2020 (UTC)
I don't have any clear evidence that it is being spammed, per se, so it seemed a bit rash for me to decide unilaterally to report it as spam. There are tons of websites I'd love to nuke out of existence at Wikipedia, after all.   If sending it to the blacklist is a consensus decision established here, then I'm happy to report it there when the discussion is closed. I certainly don't think Arjayay should be the only one removing these links. Thanks, by the way, Arjayay. Cyphoidbomb (talk) 20:47, 18 July 2020 (UTC)

Reliability of Box Office Mojo

The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.


Hi, Ainz Ooal Gown is here. I am currently trying to improve Weathering with You to GA status. When working on this article, I noticed that the total worldwide gross of the movie is reported differently on multiple websites. Hollywood Reporter says that Weathering with You grossed 357 million dollar worldwide.

That smash hit, which became the second-highest-grossing anime film of all time after it topped $357 million worldwide, is a hard act to follow.

Source: https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/amp/review/weathering-you-1239736 But on the other hand, Box Office Mojo says it grossed 193,145,004USD worldwide.
Source: https://www.boxofficemojo.com/title/tt9426210/

Now I am in a dilema on which source I should use to cite the box office earnings.

Note that Box Office Mojo is owned by IMDb and it it's official brand name is "Box Office Mojo by IMDbPro" indicating that its affiliation with IMDb database. Citing IMDb is prohibited since it is a user generated database and thus unreliable, as per WP:CITEIMDB.

I checked that BOM is frequently cited in film articles and there is no major discussion on wiki about its reliability. Please provide your opinion on this. Yours sincerely, Ainz Ooal Gown (talk) 20:39, 19 July 2020 (UTC)

You are using the wrong link. The articles says Makoto Shinkai’s long-awaited anime follow-up to his 2017 Your Name. That smash hit, which became the second-highest-grossing anime film of all time after it topped $357 million worldwide, is a hard act to follow. This is supported by BOM which says $357,986,087 or $357 million at 3 significant figures. --Emir of Wikipedia (talk) 20:52, 19 July 2020 (UTC)
@Emir of Wikipedia: can't believe I missed that. WP:TROUT to myself. Ainz Ooal Gown (talk) 21:13, 19 July 2020 (UTC)
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

The main problem

The main issue with most of these 'contended' sources is when they are used to quote opinion rather than events. There should be a disambiguation between whether the 'events' are accurate vs the 'interpretation of events' that often isn't relevant.

For example, "x is attended an event at y" using any of these sources is reliable however, its when statements such as "x is a [insert adjective]" that these sources begin to be seen as contentious

I don't really think it is possible to resolve this, but I think the weight of judgement should be on whether or not the facts they report are accurate.

Likewise, I think that all 24 hr news media is prone to inaccuracy and speculation. There should be a distinction made between the 24 hour news and scheduled programming.

For example, a fox 'live news alert' getting something wrong is more forgivable than weekly show making a statement after the fact that is false. Likewise, the willingness to retract statements has to be taken into account. Personally, I think network news should be avoided unless the story and its information is an exclusive to their platform.

There is also an information gap that is problematic that I have come across. The gap between memes and pseudonymous groups online and their classification by 'reliable sources' is significant. Often source sources are only able to talk about events that have pertained to 'real life' and so get the chronology of events, and the relationships of individuals completely wrong. Journalist's articles about memes are often far less reliable than knowyourmeme, and to the extent that they are accurate they often cite knowyourmeme as a source. This seems like a contradiction.

Just pondering CantingCrew (talk) 12:40, 19 July 2020 (UTC) CantingCrew

We do have the WP:RSBREAKING guideline, which emphasizes that breaking news reports are less reliable than reports published after more information is available. The guideline states: "Claims sourced to initial news reports should be immediately replaced with better-researched ones as soon as they are published, especially if those original reports contained inaccuracies. All breaking-news stories, without exception, are primary sources, and must be treated with caution".

On the other hand, Know Your Meme (RSP entry) is considered unreliable because its entries are user-generated, and editors expressed concerns over its lack of editorial oversight. If you have evidence that Know Your Meme exercises adequate editorial control, please share it. — Newslinger talk 03:21, 20 July 2020 (UTC)

Is CNN usable as a source for unflattering information about Fox News?

The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.


In this edit, @Levivich: argues that a user should receive a six-month topic ban for, among many other things, citing (non-opinion) CNN piece here for something potentially negative about Fox News; Levivich argues that because CNN is a commercial competitor to Fox, they cannot be cited in that context. I've seen that statement before, but never from an established editor; since it seemed shockingly wrong to me, and unlikely to get much in-depth discussion as just one small part of a larger debate over a user's broader history, I thought I'd bring it here to get a more specific answer.

If we accepted this logic, we couldn't cite any news stories at all in relation to news organizations, nor any books in an article about a publisher or author, nor any academics in the same field in an article about academics or even academic concepts - publishers would effectively be at least partially immunized from having critical information covered in their articles. The extent to which a conflict-of-interest matters depends on how narrow and specific it is, on the reputation of the individual or organization in question, on whether the statement is WP:EXCEPTIONAL and so on; "operates in the same general market" is not sufficient to automatically discount an entire massive, high-profile, top-tier news organization with a reputation for fact-checking and accuracy. This is especially true given that Fox and CNN infamously target different sections of their market - CNN aims for general mass-market appeal, while Fox targets a conservative audience specifically, eg. [1] says "Fox News has achieved considerable financial and audience rating success byusing ideology as its core branding strategy ...Fox News’ ideology-based branding strategy differentiates the network from CNN and MSNBC, which aren’t branded along ideological lines."

I mean, if we were going to count conflicts of interest this broadly, major media companies nowadays have such large and tangled ownership structures that such notional conflicts of interest would run between every major source available - eg. CNN is owned by WarnerMedia which owns HBO; does this disqualify them from any commentary on TV? Fox News also has former House Speaker Paul Ryan on its board, does that disqualify it from talking about his political opponents? News Corp owns HarperCollins, does that disqualify it from commenting on books by rival publishers? Beyond a certain point, as long as a source is a high-quality WP:RS, has a general reputation for fact-checking and accuracy, and hasn't given us any specific reason to doubt their ability to write impartially, we have to trust that reputation in situations like these. --Aquillion (talk) 17:09, 11 July 2020 (UTC)

Sitting at the 60,000ft level, we know nearly no media source is "neutral" when it comes to talking about Fox News, so yeah, the stance that was taken sets off alarms. Looking at the specific CNN article, ignoring its last two paragraphs (which I do think are "snide asides" by CNN), the CNN article is completely neutral to support the added content in the diff, and there's no issue of CNN's bias to worry about here, as it doesn't touch those last two paragraphs. I would agree if it was a CNN opinion piece about Fox, that might be more a problem, but that's not the case. --Masem (t) 17:15, 11 July 2020 (UTC)
CNN and Fox News are the two largest cable news networks. They are both for profit companies, directly competing for market share, with a financial incentive for making the other look bad. We shouldn't use CNN, alone, as a source for negative information about Fox News in the article Fox News any more than we should use Fox News as a source for negative information about CNN. Similarly, we shouldn't use The New York Times as a source for negative information about its direct competitor, The Wall Street Journal, or vice versa. Same with Washington Post and Washington Times. Same with Coca-Cola and Pepsi. Same with one political candidate as as source for negative information about their opponent. Now, it is OK to use NYT as a source of negative information about Fox, or Washington Times, or CNN, etc. But not direct competitors in the same market. Really, we shouldn't be using journalism as a source for negative information about other journalism. We should be using academic sources instead. (I am not watching this page, so please ping me if you want my attention.) Levivich[dubiousdiscuss] 17:19, 11 July 2020 (UTC)
This is a side point but the Washington Times shouldn’t be used because its a pathetic rag founded by the second coming of Jesus Christ (Korean) and still owned by his family (yes Korean Jesus is dead, but he lives in all our hearts now). We don’t actually treat them as generally reliable, do we? That would be preposterous... Horse Eye Jack (talk) 17:29, 11 July 2020 (UTC)
Its definitely usable, but whats the point of this post? It seems like you're calling out Levivich for making a bad call which probably isn't appropriate in this venue. This should have been discussed on Levivich’s talk page rather than publicly shaming them. Horse Eye Jack (talk) 17:24, 11 July 2020 (UTC)
My intent was not to call out Levivich specifically; it's more that I've seen this argument made several times and want to make sure it is properly-settled. --Aquillion (talk) 17:28, 11 July 2020 (UTC)
Ok, I understand that your intention was not to call out Levivich specifically. I wish you had perhaps phrased the fist paragraph differently but if it that wasn’t your intent then I don’t have an issue with it.
On the point of using rivals for information about each other I’ve seen this argument made before although I will admit this is the only time I’ve seen it made by an editor of Levivich’s status. I don’t buy the argument that reliable sources become unreliable when talking about their rivals, the only case I see thats makable is that a reliable source could become unreliable when discussing themselves or a corporate parent/sibling. Thats not really the same thing though. Horse Eye Jack (talk) 17:35, 11 July 2020 (UTC)

Thank you HEJ for your kind words and Aquillion for the clarification.

My contention is that this edit should be reverted (as it was, not by me) because it is improper to source negative information about Fox News (e.g., "Fox News made an error and apologized for it") to CNN, because CNN and Fox News are direct commercial competitors, being the two largest US cable TV networks. I think our policies and guidelines support this:

  • WP:RS guideline, at WP:BIASEDSOURCES: Common sources of bias include political, financial, religious, philosophical, or other beliefs. Although a source may be biased, it may be reliable in the specific context. When dealing with a potentially biased source, editors should consider whether the source meets the normal requirements for reliable sources, such as editorial control, a reputation for fact-checking, and the level of independence from the topic the source is covering.
    • In this case, CNN has a financial incentive to report negative news about Fox News, and thus its level of independence from the topic is low.
  • WP:NPOV policy, at WP:PROPORTION: An article should not give undue weight to minor aspects of its subject, but should strive to treat each aspect with a weight proportional to its treatment in the body of reliable, published material on the subject. For example, discussion of isolated events, criticisms, or news reports about a subject may be verifiable and impartial, but still disproportionate to their overall significance to the article topic. This is a concern especially in relation to recent events that may be in the news.
    • This case is an example of recent events that may be in the news, and CNN's article is an example of criticisms, or news reports about a subject may be verifiable and impartial, but still disproportionate to their overall significance to the article topic.
  • Most importantly, WP:V at WP:NOTRELIABLE: Questionable sources are those that have a poor reputation for checking the facts, lack meaningful editorial oversight, or have an apparent conflict of interest.[9]
    • CNN in this case has an apparent conflict of interest because Fox News is its direct competitor.
    • That Footnote #9 reads (emphasis mine): Further examples of sources with conflicts of interest include but are not limited to articles by any media group that promotes the holding company of the media group or discredits its competitors. This case is exactly that.
    • Footnote 9 goes on to quote The New York Times: Conflicts of interest, real or apparent, may come up in many areas. They may involve the relationships of staff members with readers, news sources, advocacy groups, advertisers, or competitors; with one another, or with the newspaper or its parent company.
  • Mostly per WP:V footnote 9, but also WP:RS and WP:NPOV, I don't think we should use CNN as a source for negative information about Fox News. Per WP:V footnote 9, we should not use articles by any media group that ... discredits its competitors. Levivich[dubiousdiscuss] 19:43, 11 July 2020 (UTC)
  • The obvious solution here is that wherever one media outlet is cited for its reporting on another, the outlet doing the reporting should be identified in the text. For example, "According to CNN, [x]", or "According to Fox News, [y]". BD2412 T 19:50, 11 July 2020 (UTC)
  • @Levivich: The same story appears in The Guardian because The Guardian is a British publication, can it be considered acceptable? Hemiauchenia (talk) 19:51, 11 July 2020 (UTC)
    Hemiauchenia, I think so, yes. The Guardian and Fox News aren't direct competitors: different media, different markets. This is as a matter of sourcing of course. There's still the question of whether the content is WP:DUE, but that's a separate question from what source is used to source the content. Levivich[dubiousdiscuss] 19:54, 11 July 2020 (UTC)
    If we went with this strict interpretation of the above in the relationship of CNN to Fox and specifically the CoI issue, then I would say that immediately follows from that that CNN and a whole host of sources up to and including the NYTimes cannot be used as sourcing to discuss anything about Trump due to Trump's attack on them as "Fake News" and their own responses back. Which, I think most editors would agree is not going to happen here. I think this is reading too far into the COI part. We generally are looking at when there's more than just that a source is in competition or has some other area of conflict with another - we're generally more focused on when the source has closer financial ties with the topic - eg a puffery piece from CNN about Jason Kilar (the current CEO of WarnerMedia which owns CNN) would be more a problem for us than a report on Fox News from CNN. When the COI is around the conflict between source and topic, this would be more at a deep political level where we know there were fundamental flaws in the logic, eg using German sources in from the 1940s to source an article about Poland. --Masem (t) 21:58, 11 July 2020 (UTC)
    If we went with this strict interpretation of the above in the relationship of CNN to Fox and specifically the CoI issue, then I would say that immediately follows from that that CNN and a whole host of sources up to and including the NYTimes cannot be used as sourcing to discuss anything about Trump due to Trump's attack on them as "Fake News" and their own responses back. - No, because WP:V, footnote 9, says competitors, not "critics". This is about money and market share, not ideology. CNN has a financial incentive to trash Fox News and vice versa. There's no "slippery slope" here. Levivich[dubiousdiscuss] 22:31, 11 July 2020 (UTC)
    They also have a financial interest to go after Trump and maintain their reputation against calls of being "fake news". I can play devils-advocate and give logic in that direction several different ways, and that's why the COI aspects we consider is not simple market competition or financial association, at least in as diluted the cable news market is, would not be a trigger here. If it were a clear duopoly, okay, maybe.
    A factor to add is exactly what is being reported, and how we are using it, eg context (as I first replied here). CNN is not the originator of the story about the cropped photo or Fox's response; the originator would be a site that is a far weaker RS (one we'd need to have its info blessed by another RS to use in the first place) that as written was an attack piece against Fox claiming the photo crop was purposely done to protect Trump (for all purposes). Now look at how CNN has actually written about it and they have cleared out nearly all of the non-neutral facets of the story, simply reporting the basics that "Fox published a cropped photo and later apologized for it." To me, regardless of how much of a financial interest that CNN may have in reporting negatively on Fox, that they did not originate the story, but they appear to be the best current RS reporting on it but not the only one, this is not an issue at all in this case. Something like this report digging deeper into Tucker Carlson poses issues as that is original criticism from CNN and that's a problem with the COI facets. --Masem (t) 22:59, 11 July 2020 (UTC)
    CNN is not the best source for this. We have better sources like The Guardian, The Independent, and The Hill, and equal-or-worse sources like People, The Week, and The Wrap. CNN's conflict of interest with Fox News shows up in its reporting. CNN's article includes negative information that none of the other articles include like Fox News' egregious cropping of Trump from the photo drew criticism and prompted unflattering media coverage for the conservative cable network and It's not the first time in recent weeks that Fox News has acknowledged a significant error related to photos accompanying news stories. In mid-June, Fox News expressed regret after it published digitally altered and misleading images of the "CHOP" demonstration in Seattle. Levivich[dubiousdiscuss] 23:44, 11 July 2020 (UTC)
    But if you put all those sources side by side to what info they state, exactly what is wrong with the CNN source? Have they exaggerated or manipulated the story? If anything, they are the most conservative (not in the political sense) in writing up the event, outside of the last two paragraphs that we can safely ignore. Sure, we could replace that with the Guardian as it the only other source you have there that is at least as good as an RS as CNN, but the Guardian, despite being a UK publication, would still be vested to see Fox News go down and eliminate its web presence - same with these other sources. (And the Guardian is also a known liberal source). It might have less of the COI issue you're concerned about but it doesn't make the COI issue go away fully. That's why I'm stressing the context of what's being reported and to what others are reporting being a critical part of the evaluation here. --Masem (t) 00:09, 12 July 2020 (UTC)
    Well, in a perfect world, I wouldn't use journalism to critique journalism. I would use academia to critique journalism. Or reputable non-profits and think tanks, like Pew. I wouldn't include this content in the article at all as undue, unless I could source it to something better than popular press. If I was going with popular press, I'd want to go with multiple top-tier outlets, like BBC, NYT, and WSJ. If they didn't cover it, I'd say it's UNDUE. But if I am to compromise further, and accept less-than-top-tier popular press, I would want multiple middle-tier outlets like The Guardian, which at least aren't the single biggest competitor, as Fox is to CNN and vice versa. So "less of the COI issue" is the reason I'd prefer The Guardian over CNN, although I'd prefer academia over any popular journalism for critiques of journalism. Levivich[dubiousdiscuss] 00:49, 12 July 2020 (UTC)
    But is this critique? Or factual information that happens to be, end of the day, egg on Fox News' face? CNN always labels opinion pieces and that label is absent here, and there's clearly no indication in the prose this is written in a personal critique style. I mean, I agree that the solution is, if the cropped picture story is deemed to be DUE, that sing the Guardian over CNN probably is better, but I am more cautioning that I think we don't want to start with an overzealous treatment of COI in this specific case when the context shows nothing that specifically calls that COI into issue. --Masem (t) 01:16, 12 July 2020 (UTC)
    Yes, I'd say an article that describes it as Fox News' egregious cropping constitutes critique. :-) And I know you said ignore the last two paragraphs, but that's like a third of the article. That's the "proof" that COI is skewing CNN's coverage of Fox News's error. Levivich[dubiousdiscuss] 01:46, 12 July 2020 (UTC)
  • I agree - we're talking financial COI among competing United States cable news and broadcast networks (ABC-NBC-CBS-FOX) so exercise caution. Check to see if they are part of the same media conglomerate. Also check to see if they own local broadcast stations, radio and television, and/or internet publications, and if found, find better sources to cite. If it's a notable enough story, it will be on the BBC, NPR broadcast and/or published in The Guardian and other RS online. A wire service may also fit the bill but if biased, it should be noted. Atsme Talk 📧 22:39, 11 July 2020 (UTC)
  • No COI for our purposes per Masem's excellent comment. We should apply a grain of salt to all sources. However, many smaller news organizations would be impossible to write about if not for articles by themselves or their competitors, since smaller news outlets are less likely to be the subject of academic analysis. Take this argument further—I've written many articles about academic books; usually the sourcing is reviews from other scholars who have written similar books, which may be in competition for the same readers. No, clearly this is taking COI too far. (Furthermore, I'm unconvinced that CNN and Fox are really aiming for the same audience). (t · c) buidhe 22:46, 11 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Comment, I recommend adding The Week as one of the sources as it’s a news aggregator reflecting what the majority of sources state on any issue. Gleeanon409 (talk) 01:15, 12 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Sure it is I reject the idea that news outlets that operate in the same space can't report on each others faux pas, frankly that is ridiculous. Who else is going to call them to account? Of course, this needs to be an actual news piece, not opinion. It would be good to back it up with a source not operating in the same space like The Guardian, but it isn't necessary. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 01:29, 12 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Sure, it can be used (CNN is generally reliable, and simply "both being new outlets" is not a COI), per buidhe and the OP. We could, of course, discuss whether it's due if only CNN is reporting it, and as bd2412 says it's likely to be appropriate to attribute their statements unless the statements are confirmed by many different sources (if CNN, the NYT, WaPo, the BBC, the Guardian etc all reported that "Fox did XYZ", we could typically just say "Fox did XYZ"). Likewise, Fox criticizing CNN would not be blocked from being added just because they are both news organizations, though again things like WEIGHT and ATTRIBUTEPOV would be considered. -sche (talk) 01:40, 12 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Usable; I think buidhe's comment is pretty spot-on. That CNN chose to include a slightly different context than other sources is possibly interesting but, for judging whether their story is a suitable source, immaterial. XOR'easter (talk) 03:00, 12 July 2020 (UTC)
It's usable. Just because CNN competes with Fox does not mean we should expect them to publish false, defamatory stories about them. In fact the article is based on a release by Fox where they say it was a mistake. Anyway the two networks don't compete over the same audiences. The demographics. of their viewers is widely different. If you like Sean Hannity you're not likely to switch to Rachel Maddow because her network said Fox is unreliable and vice versa. TFD (talk) 03:43, 12 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Sure, with attribution. They are a commercial rival so bias is a clear factor, but bias is not what we reject, its inaccuracy.Slatersteven (talk) 14:16, 12 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Yes but we should keep DUE in mind as well as being clear what is commentary vs actual clear fact. It certainly seems CNN has an unhealthy interest in FOX news (well both target each other [[2]]). As such I'm not sure I would consider a CNN article about Fox to be much more than sniping and certainly not something that establishes WEIGHT. Most of the CNN vs Fox stories seem to be light weight, commentary type articles or articles that are cheap to produce in order to fill space on the website and generate clicks. Thus in most cases we should treat them as tabloid noise even if the underlying facts are likely true. Springee (talk) 14:17, 12 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Certainly usable, although this is not the only consideration as to whether something should be included (due weight, etc.). --JBL (talk) 15:38, 12 July 2020 (UTC)
  • It comes off as a technically yes but not a great idea and most likely undue. Given they have major financial motivation to discredit each other I would be careful. Look at it another way, would you use Fox to discredit CNN? I also disagree with the Pepsi & Coke comparison. I would use Coke to criticize Pepsi since Coke is far superior! PackMecEng (talk) 16:18, 12 July 2020 (UTC)
Notwithstanding the present discussion related to Fox News' general usability, and in light of my comments above, if Fox News were to report on some situation at CNN (and this would arguably be a case like January 2019 Lincoln Memorial confrontation) and similarly kept to neutral factual reporting of the events than critical commentary, I don't we why would not, if they were the more reliable source repoting on the matter compared to mid-range RS. But that said, these events (CNN being caught in a media faux pas and Fox being the only mainstream RS reporting on it) would seem far far less likely to happen than the reverse. --Masem (t) 16:43, 12 July 2020 (UTC)
PackMecEng, what news sources would you use for information about Fox News? TFD (talk) 17:17, 12 July 2020 (UTC)
I would probably head to something like Columbia Journalism Review or the like. Something a little more removed from direct competition and takes a bit of a larger more authoritative view. Also for some reason I did not get a notification about your ping. PackMecEng (talk) 21:15, 12 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Everywhere is usable as a source for unflattering information about Fox News, as unfortunately there's precious little else that can be cited about them. Levivich's concern is understandable, but I don't think COI plays a role in this particular case. This does not mean, however, that the question wasn't justified in the context where it was raised (see the exchange between Aquillion and Horse Eye Jack above, as well as Levivich's original message). François Robere (talk) 21:02, 12 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Yes but with attribution if necessary, and due weight. Ktrimi991 (talk) 21:57, 12 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Yes generally, though occasionally additional considerations may apply, such as if CNN is the only source and not a supporting one, attribution may sometimes be necessary. They’re generally considered the most reliable among the many cable news outlets, and as others have pointed out, they’re one of the few sources that report on the organization itself, and not just the personalities associated with it. Symmachus Auxiliarus (talk) 22:17, 12 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Yes, of course. The argument about "competition" because they're both news channels seems maybe one step removed from the arguments that, say, all sources that don't agree with source X are "biased" and so criticism can be dismissed as partisanship. — Rhododendrites talk \\ 02:02, 14 July 2020 (UTC)
  • DOES NOT MATTER - If CNN is the ONLY source to mention something negative about Fox, then I don’t think reliability matters - it is UNDUE to mention it. If other sources do mention that negative something, then the reliability of CNN does not matter - since we can cite the other sources. Blueboar (talk) 02:10, 14 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Yes. A bizarre understanding of reliable news sources. This would effectively exclude all news sources from being sources on articles about other news sources since they're all in some vague sense competitors. Snooganssnoogans (talk) 05:40, 14 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Yes, obviously. CNN is a reliable source. Opinion pieces should be attributed, factual pieces can be stated as fact. This is factual reporting, and the underlying fact is not even in dispute. Guy (help!) 14:10, 14 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Yes. Being a competitor does not prevent CNN from reporting on Fox News. The same would apply if Fox News were to report on CNN, or the New York Times were to report on the Washington Post, or if ABC News were to report on NPR, etc. Calidum 15:53, 14 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Yes, obviously, and per Rhododendrites. The COI argument presumes that reputable journalistic entities, as a practice, attack other journalistic entities in order to drive profits. That's just not the case, and the most reasonable place to find criticisms of professional work is from other professionals working in the same field. This stretches the COI argument too far (and perhaps means a closer look should be taken at the cited footnote in WP:V to see if it really reflects policy thinking in this area). Grandpallama (talk) 21:50, 14 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Yes, of course, per Guy. Whether CNN's reporting of facts reflects poorly on Fox or Trump is irrelevant, and believing so shows a troubling adoption of Trump's specious definition of fake news, IOW any reporting, regardless of how true, that reflects poorly on him. No, any source that generally reports facts accurately is a RS, regardless of whether those facts reflect poorly on someone or something, such as Fox News. We don't ban the use of opposing POV reported by RS. We don't ban the use of sources that accurately document when Trump or Fox News shoot themselves in the foot by lying and pushing false agendas yet again. If anyone in that equation should be banned it would be the ones who are lying, not CNN, which keeps us tethered to the same reality that most other mainstream RS also document. -- Valjean (talk) 15:29, 15 July 2020 (UTC)
  • largely irrelevant Nobody disputes that Fox did what was reported, so there's no actual question of reliability involved. The real issue is whether the incident is important enough to memorialize here. Mangoe (talk) 17:08, 15 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Yes, of course, per Guy and Rhododendrites's very good points. Neutralitytalk 16:44, 18 July 2020 (UTC)
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

chabad.org

chabad.org is a website affiliated with the Chabad movement of Hasidic Judaism. Some of its pages have recently been cited as sources in The Exodus article. Partly to cover Orthodox Jewish beliefs and practices, and partly to offer an extensive quotation by Menachem Mendel Schneerson. The article's talk page includes some discussion on the website's possible unreliability as a source, but without a clear conclusion. I could not find previous discussions on the topic in the archives of this noticeboard.

Should the website be deprecated as a source outright, or can we attribute statements to the website and/or its staff? Dimadick (talk) 09:42, 17 July 2020 (UTC)

  • I've found the website to be accurate for the Chabad perspective on Jewish theology, although better sources often exist that's not enough for deprecation. (t · c) buidhe 10:16, 17 July 2020 (UTC)
  • This is a long-standing bugbear of mine. Chabad has a very specific perspective on Judaismn, but is used incredibly widely on WP including on articles where the Lubavicher perspective is way out of line with the Jewish mainstream. I think we should be very much more cautious when using this source, and there should be a presumption that it is not used for statements of fact without explicit consensus and not used for quotations / opinions unless there is third-party commentary establishing the objective significance of the stated view. Guy (help!) 10:49, 17 July 2020 (UTC)
  • My feeling is that it should be avoided unless we're stating something about the beliefs of Chabad itself, and even then there are probably better sources. I don't think either of the two things it's been used to source are particularly controversial - the Schneerson quote is fine, for instance, as expressing Schneerson's words. Whether we include Schneerson is a question of DUEness etc rather than a question of sourcing. I do not really think it's a good source for establishing what Sukkot is though - there are much better sources out there, and I'm trying to collect them on the article's talk page. The main problem with the additions at The Exodus is that they are actually unsourced rather than the use of Chabad.org (to source a long quote and a single sentence in three sections).--Ermenrich (talk) 16:18, 17 July 2020 (UTC)
  • They have a strict, rather dogmatic theological perspective on Jewish history. The Hebrew Bible is the true word of God, especially as interpreted by their Rebbes and other trusted insider rabbis. Their interpretation, in their view, is the last word on any Jewish issue broadly construed, including Jewish history, the Land of Israel (Palestine), and the State of Israel. On the latter also, their political views and actions are also rather right-wing radical. Their purpose, in the vast array of web sites they develop, is to propagate their views on Judaism and on Jewish matters as wide as possible. They are present on Wikipedia, they recognize its value and influence, and they use it for their own purposes also. They operate world-wide as a well-funded radical religious organization that aims constantly and primarily to expand their base of adherents and supporters; their presence in cyberspace is just an extension of their social and political modi operandi. All this is even before just briefly mentioning their extreme messianic streak, that seems to have been evolving since the passing of their last Rebbe in 1994. Their religious material should be used with extreme caution, with all the above in mind. As for the particular field of Jewish history, which is the one that concerns me directly the most, their material should be considered basically as extremely biased and unreliable for Wikipedia purposes, as a secular, non-religious encyclopedia. warshy (¥¥) 18:15, 17 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Ok for about self when it comes to the Chabad movement. For the given example I would not consider them reliable, the Lubavitchers play fast and loose with both facts and history. Its a movement built on internal repression and dogma not scholarship. Horse Eye Jack (talk) 23:07, 17 July 2020 (UTC)
  • As others have mentioned here, I would support this as a source for Chabad's viewpoints, however, users inexperienced with the nuances of Orthodox Judaism may encounter this website and use it as a more general source, when in reality, it is describing a very narrow viewpoint. Ultimately, the decision to include it in an article as a source for a general concept in Judaism, rather than something unique to Chabad, will have to be based on a judgement call by the editor that wishes to add it, and should therefore only be used by editors that feel confident enough in there understanding of the subject at hand to make that call. A Chabad article about Jewish Passover customs, for example, might very well just be a simple summary of mainstream customs, and as such, could potentially be used as a source. As for a Chabad article about Jewish theology, if used at all, it would need to be in a sentence such as: "The viewpoint of Chabad, a movement within Hasidic Judaism is that...". --PuzzledvegetableIs it teatime already? 14:07, 20 July 2020 (UTC)

RfC: Fox News

The following discussion is an archived record of a request for comment. Please do not modify it. No further edits should be made to this discussion. A summary of the conclusions reached follows.
The result of this RFC is that there is no consensus regarding the reliability of Fox News (hereafter "Fox").

In regards to the areas of politics and science, there is strong disagreement over whether Fox has a demonstrable record of reliable reporting. Those opposed to Fox as a reliable source pointed to many instances where information was misrepresented, misinterpreted, or incorrect (what some might call a "spin first, issue corrections later" attitude for breaking news reports). Those in favour of Fox make the argument that everyone makes mistakes, with Fox correcting them if/when necessary and with no more mistakes than any other news outlet. With the exception of sensational headlines and doctored photographs, however, there is a reasonable consensus that Fox does not blatantly make up facts. In areas outside these two subjects, as well as reporting from local/affiliate stations, Fox is generally seen as reliable; there were little to no complaints made about these areas of coverage, with some of the opposition agreeing that they were acceptable.

In other words: for science and political referencing there is no consensus regarding the reliability of Fox News, and it should be used with caution to verify contentious claims. For other subjects Fox News is generally considered reliable.

The closers would also like to remark on a few points that, while not directly in the purview of this RFC, should be mentioned.

  • The pundits and talk show programs related to Fox were explicitly excluded from this RFC, and thus were not considered in the close; they have their own section at WP:RSP.
  • There was a very large amount of what we considered to be bludgeoning from certain participants of this RFC. While there is no formal limit to the maximum number of times one may comment on a given discussion, replying with the same argument(s) to multiple participants holding an opposite viewpoint becomes extremely tedious (bordering on tendentious).
  • Parallel discussions (such as the "Also CNN & MSNBC" section, predictions on how the discussion should close, etc) should ideally be kept to a minimum in contentious RFCs such as this one, not only to save on the word count but also on the amount of side comments and sniping that frequently accompany them.

Signed


Which of the following best describes the reliability of the reporting of Fox News? (as separate from their cable pundits) foxnews.com     has been cited over 15,000 times on Wikipedia.

  • Option 1: Generally reliable for factual reporting
  • Option 2: Unclear or additional considerations apply
  • Option 3: Generally unreliable for factual reporting
  • Option 4: Publishes false or fabricated information, and should be deprecated as in the 2017 RfC of the Daily Mail

Additional questions:

  • Does FOXNews.com have a separate reliability from their cable news reporting?
  • Do local affiliate stations have a separate reliability to the main Fox News operation?
  • Is Fox News reliable for US Politics?
The last RfC on Fox News was in 2010, Fox News is currently described at the RS/P as:

FOX News was determined by consensus to be generally reliable per WP:NEWSORG. The network consists of 12 news bureaus worldwide, including their New York headquarters. Several shows in the channel's news lineup include America's Newsroom, The Daily Briefing, Bill Hemmer Reports (replaced Shepard Smith), Special Report with Bret Baier, The Story with Martha MacCallum, and Chris Wallace anchoring Fox News Sunday. Some editors perceive FOX News to be a biased source whereas others do not; neither affects reliability of the source. Editors should always exercise caution when choosing sources, and treat talk show content hosted by political pundits as opinion pieces, avoid stating opinions in Wikivoice and use intext attribution as applicable. The Fox News website maintains a form for requesting corrections.

Hemiauchenia (talk) 18:20, 7 June 2020 (UTC)

Responses (Fox News)

  • Option 2: In view of recent events, their reporting seems biased towards information discrediting the protests. However, their factual reporting of non politically charged subjects stays adequate. That being said, I noticed that they give a lot of weight to POTUS since it was revealed that he was a regular watcher. Being nearly the only network giving him interviews. Feynstein (talk) 18:33, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 Fox News is a standard WP:NEWSORG, yes it may contain a bias (most RSs do), but does not mean it is not reliable. Fox also issues corrections which further indicates fact-checking. At this point it is beating a dead horse unless some substantive evidence can be presented on the contrary. Regards  Spy-cicle💥  Talk? 18:48, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2 or 3 (lean towards 2), the quality of the core network’s reporting has declined over the last decade. Care must be taken though, most network affiliates (such as WTIC-TV) remain generally reliable sources and I want any downgrade to be clear about that. Horse Eye Jack (talk) 18:54, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Options 1/2. Option 1 for straight news reporting. Fox News's straight news reporting is very different from their talk shows like Hannity, Ingraham, etc. Their news department's bias appears more in what things they choose to cover than in how they cover it. This bias doesn't make it unreliable - almost all news orgs have some form of bias. However, given the network's close ties with Donald Trump, I think option 2 is warranted for coverage of Trump in particular.
    I don't think any outcome of this RfC should apply to content produced by local bureaus affiliated with Fox. In my experience those bureaus are no more or less reliable than other local news bureaus. −−− Cactus Jack 🌵 19:00, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 Per User:Spy-cycle. Fox News does appropriate fact checking on their reports. This establishes reliability of their works in general and the fact that it is cited quite a lot means that most in wikipedia understand that it is a standard news organization. Furthermore, the others who say that it is not as reliable are going to argue based on subjective measures of not liking it with no empirical metrics. The fact that Fox News tends to have notable commentators like senators, representatives, etc that are notable right wing and left wing on shows like Tucker Carlson and Hannity's shows means they are not like Daily Mail. Also some heavy members of government like Mike Huckabee (ex governor and ex presidential candidate) and Jason Chaffetz (ex congress member) actually host some of the programs and this gives the network insider access to details on developing news. Furthermore, emotional reporting done by CNN and MSNBC does not demote them either. The point on reliability is not whether their stories end up to be true, it is do they have fact checking. Many news stories are developing so the details get confirmed and then rejected as time goes on and as more information emerges. CNN and MSNBC were wrong about Russian Collision, Muller Report, impeachment proceedings on Trump, and other stuff, but they would not be unreliable in Wikipedia's eyes either.Ramos1990 (talk) 19:22, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1, except for prime time "pundit" reporting about Trump. Speaking generally about, for example, articles posted to the website, Ad Fontes, an organization that analyzes and compares news sources, considers the website reliable. I agree with CactusJack. --Bsherr (talk) 19:29, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
    @Bsherr:You might want to double check that source... They put Fox News in the “Red Rectangle: Nonesense damaging to public discourse“ [3] which is their lowest category, they rate it below Daily Mail and I see no indication that they endorse Fox New’s reliability (at most they say “Reliability scores for articles and shows are on a scale of 0-64. Scores above 24 are generally acceptable; scores above 32 are generally good.” while assigning Fox News a score of 26.75). Can you elaborate? Horse Eye Jack (talk) 21:01, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 for news, 2 for pundit shows fixed 10:04, 3 July 2020 (UTC) didn't we just have an RfC about Fox News a few months ago? Did the OP check to see before calling this RfC?? Fox News is as reliable a source as the other cable news networks that also host pundits. The news is reliable, the pundits are opinion. See the write-up at WP:RS/Perennial sources. Atsme Talk 📧 20:53, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
    Adding links to demonstrate that Fox political commentary (not it's newscasts) is very much like that of all other mainstream media except with a conservative bias; the latter of which is not a valid reason to demote a RS anymore than it is valid to demote CNN for it's liberal bias. The US has a two-party system so biased opposition is expected. Pew Research demonstrates the stark partisan split of Fox News Channel viewers, noting that it is by far the most watched cable news channel. Pew states: Liberal Democrats are far more likely than conservative or moderate Democrats to say they distrust Fox news (77% vs. 48%). The Game of the Name, A Slobbering Love Affair: The True (And Pathetic) Story of the Torrid Romance Between Barack Obama and the Mainstream Media, Bias: A CBS Insider Exposes How the Media Distort the News, The Rise and Fall of the Obama-Media Romance 16:10, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
    Sidebar note to closer (for clarity) - I just want to distinguish between the political pundits that headline Fox News Channel's primetime line-up vs actual news reporting by Fox news anchors, such as Special Report w/Bret Baier, Fox News at Night w/Shannon Bream, Bill Hemmer Reports, America's Newsroom w/Ed Henry and Sandra Smith (reporter), Fox News Sunday w/Chris Wallace, etc. This RfC is supposed to be focused only on the newscasting, not the political commentary by political pundits on The Five, Hannity, Carlson, Laura Ingraham, Fox & Friends in the mornings, etc. but several of the iVotes indicate that the two have been conflated. CNN refers to their political pundit Don Lemon as a news journalist despite the fact that his show is not a newscast, rather it is biased political commentary not unlike the political pundits on Fox News Channel, and the same or similar applies to Wolf Blitzer, Chris Cuomo, Anderson Cooper, Jake Tapper, etc. none of whom anchor a newscast; rather they host commentary/opinion. We would not downgrade CNN News because of their political pundits. Atsme Talk 📧 22:08, 11 June 2020 (UTC)
    Adding - a substantial number, if not all, of the sources cited by the opposes are questionable sources not suitable for contentious claims about others per WP:V policy which states: Questionable sources are those that have a poor reputation for checking the facts, lack meaningful editorial oversight, or have an apparent conflict of interest.[9] Footnote 9 further states: ...sources with conflicts of interest include but are not limited to articles by any media group that promotes the holding company of the media group or discredits its competitors; news reports by journalists having financial interests in the companies being reported or in their competitors; material (including but not limited to news reports, books, articles and other publications). 12:04, 3 July 2020 (UTC)
Just FYI Ed Henry has been fired [4], its this sort of rapid turnover at Fox that really worries me. None of the voices I considered reliable a decade or two ago are there. Horse Eye Jack (talk) 01:23, 3 July 2020 (UTC)
Meh - turnovers aren't a big deal. It happens to all of them, including the big three broadcast networks, not just cable news. Look at Tucker Carlson: he was a CNN commentator (2000—2005), co-hosted Crossfire (2001—2005), did MSNBC (2005—2008) and now hosts one of the highest-rated talking head shows in primetime on FoxNews Channel. Atsme Talk 📧 09:57, 3 July 2020 (UTC)
Carlson is a racist, misinformation spreading, conspiracy theorist... Not a journalist or news presenter. Unless I highly misunderstand the conversation here today we are talking only about the news side and not the commentators like Carlson. If we are talking about the bottom of the barrel scum that are the Fox News commentators then my vote goes from leaning 2 to a rock solid 4. Horse Eye Jack (talk) 17:33, 3 July 2020 (UTC)
The fact that he's been allowed on FN for twelve years (along with such standards of journalism as Sean Hannity (24 years) and Bill O'Reilly (21 years)) tells you all you need to know about their integrity as a network. François Robere (talk) 18:28, 3 July 2020 (UTC)
François Robere, 1. Those are not the people we are talking about, as the RfC states this is ONLY about Fox News' news programming, not their opinionated talk show hosts. 2. Please stop WP:BLUDGEONING. It is not necessary or constructive to respond to each and every opinion that contradicts yours. JOEBRO64 18:56, 3 July 2020 (UTC)
Also, for the sake of nitpicking: O'Reilly was a respected journalist before moving to Fox. He'd worked at ABC and CBS for several years and hosted Inside Edition, where he became one of the only people to ever interview Joel Steinberg. JOEBRO64 19:01, 3 July 2020 (UTC)
Actually, these are exactly the people we are talking about. Fox news is one network, to which both the "news" and the "opinions" aspects belong. They're both under the same management, part of the same editorial hierarchy and paid by the same people; there's no "Fox Opinions" and "Fox News", just "Fox News". You cannot untwine the two, and no media critic, analyst or academic that I'm aware of does so.
Re: WP:BLUDGEONING - ah... it's you who replied to someone who contradicts your opinion, I replied to Horse Eye Jack... François Robere (talk) 11:56, 4 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3. You can track how Fox's news output has moved over the last three to four years from a right-leaning mainstream source to part of the conservative media bubble. It's extensively documented in Yochai Benkler's Network Propaganda, and you can track it over successive iterations of the Ad Fontes chart. You can also see it in specific events such as the departure of Shep Smith. It used to be that Fox talk shows were junk, and Fox news broadcasts and websites were OK. Not so any more. Example: "the amount of coverage Fox News devotes to [Antifa] is preposterous. A search for “antifa” on Fox News’ website from November 2016 to the present returns 668 results, while “homelessness” returns 587, and “OxyContin,” 140. “Permafrost” returns 69. A decentralized, leaderless activist group with no record of lethal violence in this country, antifa has been skilfully transmogrified by the conservative media into one of the gravest threats facing Americans in 2019" [5]. The wall of separation between reporting and opinion has long since been blown away, and Fox is now the media arm of the administration. On CO|VID-19 it has published outright misinformation "Tara Setmayer, a spring 2020 Resident Fellow at the Institute of Politics and former Republican Party communications director, said what’s coming from Fox News and other pro-Trump media goes well beyond misinformation. Whether downplaying the views of government experts on COVID-19’s lethality, blaming China or philanthropist Bill Gates for its spread, or cheering shutdown protests funded by Republican political groups, it’s all part of “an active disinformation campaign,” she said, aimed at deflecting the president’s responsibility as he wages a reelection campaign." [6] I could go on. Fox has changed over the last three to four years, in a meaningful way, and we should recognise that. Guy (help!) 20:56, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
    I do not know the reliablity of Yochai Benkler's "Network Propaganda", not listed at RSP so I cannot determine its usefulness in this discussion. The opinion of a Buzzfeed News journalist on how much coverage Fox News should give to Antifa compared to homelessness is irrelavent. We need to know whether these articles produced by Fox are reliable and fact checked (which as I explained above I believe they are) not what topics they do and do not cover. I cannot speak for the latter half of your comment since it is an offhand quote from Tara Setmaye as opposed to a multitude of RSs. It is possible Setmayer is true but was referring to the talk shows like Tucker Carlson Tonight which is more likely to be true as opposed to the website. Regards  Spy-cicle💥  Talk? 21:24, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
    It doesn't matter for our purposes whether Fox covers various news events proportionally. What matters is whether specific news articles produced by Fox News are reliably accurate. If we were using Fox News coverage as an integrated whole to tell what current events are important based on their coverage, yes, that would be a problem, because they often selectively choose what topics to cover most heavily. But Fox's lack of coverage of the opioid crisis, for example, has no bearing on whether an individual Fox News article on homelessness, for example, is accurate. −−− Cactus Jack 🌵 21:29, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
    I'll just add a bit of clarity per an NPR interview with Benkler: INSKEEP: Benkler was drawing a picture of something we can't really see, how millions of people find and pass on information. He's a Harvard professor. He also works with the Open Society Foundations. Those are the pro-democracy groups funded by George Soros, the financier who has commonly backed Democrats in the United States. Does anyone have a link to the "peer review" so we can see who was on that panel? Atsme Talk 📧 16:16, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Comment I agree with other commenters that the reliability of their cable pundits are separate from their news operation (I would consider the pundits to be generally unreliable considering their recent role in downplaying the Pandemic and for many other misleading and false statements made throughout the years). However their publication of a false story about Seth Rich working with Wikileaks was an egrigious error of judgement, which they (thankfully) subsequently retracted, which makes them much better than some sources (cough, OpIndia, cough). However, their decision to publish the story in the first place makes me question their editorial judgement. Hemiauchenia (talk) 21:48, 7 June 2020 UTC)
  • Concerns have been raised about other articles in Fox News by Malia Zimmerman, the author of the Seth Rich report, see The New Republic and Quartz
    That was Hannity - a pundit. Maddow does the same stuff only different topics. We've also endured 2 or 3 years of a Russian collusion nothingburger by left leaning sources. Our job is to bypass the speculation, conspiracy theories and biased opinion journalism regardless of who is publishing it - they all do. Stick to WP:RECENTISM, WP:NOTNEWS, WP:NEWSORG - the latter of which are now conglomerates. Wait for the historians and academics to give their retrospective accountings. There is no argument here that I've read that is not based in political opinion, and that is not a valid reason to declare the most watched cable news show unreliable. Atsme Talk 📧 21:57, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
    @Atsme:, While Hannity also spread the conspiracy theory, it was also reported on at foxnews.com, see this archive. Hemiauchenia (talk) 22:01, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
    That archived report was simply a news report - the big 3 also reported the incident. ABC reported it and criticized Fox "commentators", not Fox newscasters. Please state the facts accurately. Fox has criticized the networks as well for their misreporting of events. It goes back and forth. Atsme Talk 📧 22:09, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
    Atsme, MSNBC is not reliable for factual reporting. Even though Maddow, unlike Hannity, does cite her sources. Guy (help!) 23:03, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
    Guy, do you frequently watch Hannity or Maddow? If my memory serves, they're on at the same time? From what I understand, Hannity actually interviews the sources on his show (radio talk-show, too). I can quickly recall Maddow's "self-defeating spectacle" per Slate over Trump's tax returns, and there are several such spectacles, not unlike Hannity's but guess who leads in the ratings for whatever reason? And what exactly determines "mainstream" - one's POV, or the ratings? Atsme Talk 📧 21:24, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3 I would not trust anything I read on Wikipedia that was cited to Fox News content alone. They purposefully manipulate their content for political attention and have an obvious bias that should disqualify them from any use as a reference for even the most basic facts, especially when it comes to America and/or the rest of the world. GPinkerton (talk) 21:50, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3, Fox News is politically biased to the extent that it affects their supposedly factual reporting. Take this article, front page of their website right now, about the New York Times, which is titled: Liberal paper's editorial page editor steps down amid fury over Cotton op-ed note that the actual article once you click on it is titled differently, meaning that they specifically had this title on their home page in order to drive up rage in place of actually reporting. This is just one example of many, Fox News is a right-wing propaganda outlet that is most certainly not reliable. I would not go so far as to call them unreliable, since as far as I know they have not published downright false information systematically, but I am changing my vote per comments below, any source which publishes climate change denial and Seth Rich conspiracy theories is not reliable. Having that green next to their name is a display in bothsidesism that is not reflected in reality. Devonian Wombat (talk) 22:18, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
    • Which part of the headline was inaccurate? The NYT itself reported that its editorial page editor had resigned and that his resignation was connected to negative response to the publication of Tom Cotton's op-ed. [8] --Metropolitan90 (talk) 04:14, 10 June 2020 (UTC)
    • The New York Times is a left-wing paper. The headline you're referring to is completely accurate (if real). Many news organizations title their headlines differently on the main page than the actual article and usually it's to condense content or drum up clicks. CNN's front page is doing that right now. Chess (talk) (please use {{ping|Chess}} on reply) 02:56, 22 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3, or, failing that, 2. No one, I hope, disputes that Fox is extremely WP:BIASED on anything to do with American politics (and I'll note that cites to it are often careless about the requirement for in-text attribution that that generally requires.) While such biased sources can be used provided their bias doesn't interfere with their fact-checking or accuracy, the issue with Fox is that the ideological mission it was founded for takes absolute priority over these things. ([9][10]) It has been covered as a case-study in propaganda ([11][12]) and as a leader in the shift towards market-driven sensationalism at the expense of accuracy. ([13][14]) More importantly for our purposes, these things have led to misleading or outright inaccurate coverage of many disparate topics, especially, though not limited to, climate change. ([15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24]) Most recently (and perhaps most dangerously), Fox News' COVID-19 coverage has been notably inaccurate in a way that may have contributed to the severity of the epidemic in the US ([25][26][27]); this, I think, is the main reason to categorize it as a 3. It is true that the network is extremely popular and has high viewership, and it is true that a lot of what they cover is merely biased rather than misleading; additionally, it could be tempting to say that the network is only grossly, constantly misleading and inaccurate in a few specific contexts (eg. climate change), and that it's therefore unusable for those topics but still usable elsewhere. But I feel the recent wave of COVID-19 misinformation from the network provides clear evidence that Fox will freely publish inaccurate or misleading stories without warning, on any topic, the moment the people in charge decide that doing so is important to their core ideological mission and hand it down as part of the daily memo, even in situations where doing so is extremely dangerous. Trying to carve out only a few "unsafe" uses for it as a source is a bad idea because the underlying problem is systematic - while they are not incapable of fact-checking and accuracy, their ability to meet that standard is fatally compromised by a structure that places it completely subordinate to their ideological goals, and by ownership and leadership that have shown themselves to be entirely willing to disregard fact-checking and accuracy, even for extremely important topics, when they find it ideologically convenient to do so. --Aquillion (talk) 22:28, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
    Aquillion, please delete specify correction 10:04, 3 July 2020 (UTC) the sources that refer to the political commentary on Fox News Channel and not Fox News newcasts. This RfC is focused on the newscast, not the political commentary talk-shows. I went through several of your sources and they refer to the commentary, not the news. Thanks! Atsme Talk 📧 15:44, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2 for most purposes, option 3 for political and racial issues, based largely on the fact that the reputation of the network for bias would taint the reliability of Wikipedia articles citing it for those purposes. Fox just drew controversy for an issue where it posted a graphic of stock market gains tied to prominent murders of African-Americans. Moreover—and this is an aspect I really haven't seen raised before—option 2, at least, because some of their content appears to be undisclosed paid advertising. For example, in one period I saw numerous articles on Fox touting a "Black Rifle Coffee" company, so much so that I even started a draft article on the company. However, I quickly ran into a roadblock in finding that all other news reporting of any substance on the company was in pay-for-play churnalism venues. Upon further examination, it became apparent to me that the Fox pieces were written more like paid advertisements than objective news pieces, and contained objectively false characterizations of the notoriety of the company. There was no disclosure of any payment, so Fox is either in the pay-for-play reporting business, or they are allowing articles to be published that readily appear to be pay-for-play reporting. Either option is problematic for any news coverage that could potentially benefit a party with a pecuniary interest in how an article is presented, from a perspective of either financial or political gain. BD2412 T 22:41, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
    BD2412, do you have a link to that controversy? I'm on island time and pretty much out of the loop in real-time. Atsme Talk 📧 00:56, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
    Sure, covered here. Of course, Fox is hardly the first network to have to apologize for tone deaf coverage. BD2412 T 01:09, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
    Thank you. You're right about apologies - back in January, CNN went silent when Andrew McCabe apologized for lying to investigators. Most recently, this apology by Brian Stelter with CNN who lied about ‘no sign of smoke or fire’. Do we downgrade CNN? I can provide numerous errors and ommissions for that network, as well as MSNBC, ABC, CBS & NBC. Did any other network besides Fox News report these things? We've already seen how the left-leaning stations & networks handled Reade-Biden sexual assault allegation vs how they handled Kavanaugh. WP garnered negative media attention over the left-leaning handling of it - don't you find that concerning? Being a biased source is not a valid reason to downgrade the most-watched news source (with right & left viewers) - to do so is strictly POV rather than being based on an equivalent analysis with other networks. WP policy requires NPOV - it's one of our core content policies - downgrading RS because we disagree with their POV is noncompliant with NPOV when choosing sources. Is the plan to downgrade all political news because it's all biased? Atsme Talk 📧 01:36, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
    I am actually somewhat more concerned that they may be promoting paid advertising as news. In retrospect, the thing that first struck me as suspicious about the "Black Rifle Coffee" story is that it appeared on the Fox website, then disappeared for a time, and then reappeared at intervals, a pattern more characteristic of an advertising campaign than a news story. BD2412 T 02:04, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
    I don't see any paid advertising scheme there, but I do see insensitivity, and they apologized for taking it out of context, as well they should - somebody obviously wasn't thinking straight. There is no mention in that report about "Black Rifle Coffee" that I could find, so it seems to me that mentioning it with the S&P issue would be SYNTH with a splash of OR, wouldn't it? Newsrooms can be hectic, and you can rest assured it's a ripe environment for mistakes. The latter is why I have always stressed "exercise caution" when citing news sources today. The same FCC regulations that apply to broadcast news don't apply in the same manner to cable/internet news - they enjoy much more freedom because they're not using public airwaves, although none of them are totally immune from political pressure. If you haven't read my op-ed in The Signpost this month, please do.<— shameless advertising, not paid advertising. 😉 Atsme Talk 📧 18:34, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
    SYNTH and OR are not really applicable, as we are not discussing whether to include such assertions in an article. Whether we are dealing with shameless advertising or paid advertising, the ultimate effect is that they published claims about the subject that led me to believe that it was a notable subject, and those claims turned out to be inaccurate. BD2412 T 18:21, 9 June 2020 (UTC)

*Option 3 they call Sean Hannity, Tucker Carlson, and Laura Ingraham news. Shows that they don't separate factual reporting from opinions. They promote conspiracy theories with no basis and call it news. Smith0124 (talk) 00:14, 8 June 2020 (UTC)

Striking sockpuppet vote and comment. Humanengr (talk) 00:32, 20 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Smith0124, there's a difference between opinion & talk shows and straight news reporting. Fox's talk shows are as much of a crapshoot, w.r.t. political affairs, as all other mainstream media. ProcrasinatingReader (talk) 00:20, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 per Atsme with a bit of the Option 2 caution suggested by Cactus Jack. I personally think this RfC should be closed since the intent seems to be to ask the same question over and over again until finally someone will close with the answer a group of editors has been hunting for. Springee (talk) 01:01, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 While Fox News Channel was founded to provide a forum for U.S. conservative opinion, it has always provided a professional news service. I don't see that the fact they provide right wing commentary detracts from that. Many of their talk show hosts came from other cable news networks: Glenn Beck, Geraldo Rivera, Lou Dobbs, while Megyn Kelly moved from Fox to NBC. All news by the way is biased since editorial discretion is required in choosing stories to present. For example, Fox News covered the sexual assault allegations against Joe Biden long before other legacy media did. But that has nothing to do with the accuracy of their reporting, merely that their emphasis is different. TFD (talk) 02:39, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3. The following text is in regards to the news reporting division at Fox News (not its prime talk shows and commentators). Academic sources widely consider Fox News as a propaganda outlet, including in its straight news reporting which is often misleading, hypes up non-stories and gets things egregiously wrong all the time. I'll keep the focus primarily on two issues rather than to just list every egregiously wrong thing that Fox News has done: (i) Fox News' climate change denial propaganda and (ii) the intentional promotion of Seth Rich conspiracy theories to divert attention from a negative news cycle for Trump.
    (I) Climate change. Peer-reviewed research has widely described Fox News as a major platform for climate change denial.[1][2][3][4] According to the fact-checking website Climate Feedback, Fox News is part of "a network of unreliable outlets for climate news."[5]
    • Bill Sammon, the Fox News Washington managing editor, instructed Fox News journalists to dispute the scientific consensus on climate change: "A leaked email from the managing editor of Fox News Washington, Bill Sammon, during the Copenhagen climate summit in 2009 reveals Fox’s sceptical policy towards climate change. Sammon advised Fox journalists to “refrain from asserting that the planet has warmed (or cooled) in any given period without IMMEDIATELY pointing out that such theories are based upon data that critics have called into question”." Page 174 of Marisol Sandoval. "From Corporate to Social Media: Critical Perspectives on Corporate Social Responsibility in Media and Communication Industries". Routledge.
    • Bret Baier, a straight-news anchor pushing climate denial propaganda -“In February 2010, a paper on sea level rise that had previously been published in Nature Geosciences was formally withdrawn by the authors because of an error they had identified subsequently in their calculations. Fox News announced the development in this vein: “More Questions About Validity of Global Warming Theory.” In fact, the error in the calculations had led the authors to projections of future sea level rise that were too low!" Page 223 of Michael E. Mann. “The Hockey Stick and the Climate Wars: Dispatches From the Front Lines.”
    • Bill Hemmer, a straight-news anchor: Promotion of Climategate falsehoods: "“This particular falsehood had been promoted recently by venues such as Fox News , e.g., Bill Hemmer on Fox’s America’s Newsroom, December 3, 2009: “Recently leaked emails reveal that scientists use, quote, ‘tricks’ to hide evidence of a decline in global temperatures over the past, say, few decades." Page 353 of Michael E. Mann. “The Hockey Stick and the Climate Wars: Dispatches From the Front Lines.”
    (II) Murder of Seth Rich conspiracy (i.e. "Russia didn't hack the DNC"). On May 16, 2017, a day when other news organizations were extensively covering Donald Trump's revelation of classified information to Russia, Fox News ran a lead story about a private investigator's uncorroborated claims about the murder of Seth Rich, a DNC staffer. The Fox News story reported that the private investigator had uncovered evidence that Rich was in contact with Wikileaks and that law enforcement were covering it up.[6] The story was in the context of right-wing conspiracy theories that Hillary Clinton and the Democratic Party had Seth Rich killed because he was the source of the DNC leaks.[6] U.S. intelligence agencies determined Russia was the source of the leaks.[7] In reporting the investigator's claims, the Fox News report reignited right-wing conspiracy theories about the killing.[6][8] The Fox News story fell apart within hours because other news organizations did the basic journalistic legwork to confirm aspects of the story that Fox News intentionally opted not to do.[9] Furthermore, other news organizations quickly revealed the investigator was a Donald Trump supporter and had according to NBC News "developed a reputation for making outlandish claims, such as one appearance on Fox News in 2007 in which he warned that underground networks of pink pistol-toting lesbian gangs were raping young women."[6][10] Later that same day, the private investigator said he had no evidence that Rich had contacted Wikileaks.[11] The investigator claimed he only learned about the possible existence of the evidence from the Fox News reporter herself.[11] Even though other news organizations had quickly found the story to be erroneous and the story had complete fallen apart within hours, Fox News chose merely to alter the contents of its story and its headline, but did not issue corrections.[12][13]  It took Fox News a week to retract the story. Unlike normal news organizations, Fox News did not bother to publicly explain what went wrong in its reporting.[14] The reporter behind the fabricated story, Malia Zimmermann, may still be working at Fox News (that's at least what her Twitter bio says) despite having egregiously fabricated a story – Fox News can't show the basic transparency of clarifying whether she is still working behind the scenes on Fox News stories.[15]
    Note that as soon as the Fox News story appeared, editors on the Murder of Seth Rich page fought hard to include it in the article. Editors on the talk page argued that Fox News was considered "generally reliable" (this includes one editor who is voting for Option 1 in this very RfC).[16] This is precisely why Option 1 is unacceptable. Snooganssnoogans (talk) 03:00, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
    • And note that I argued against inclusion on the basis that the story had not been widely reported. Also note that you argued vociferously to include a misleading story about Rep. Tulsi Gabbard that had only been reported in one news source (NBC) and I argued against inclusion for the same reason. But that is the nature of investigative reporting. One news source presents something that a source told them and the rest of the media either pick up the story or they don't. Are we going to ban NBC News too on the basis that they are biased in favor of establishment Democrats? TFD (talk) 03:16, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
      • As soon as one other RS reported "According to Fox News...", you said "Fantastic! Let's include this batshit insane conspiracy theory in the article."[28] I have no idea what your Gabbard commentary is about. On the Murder of Seth Rich article, I had to spend hours re-writing and fixing the article, and preventing editors such as yourself from lending credibility to a deranged conspiracy theory on one of the most read websites in the world and preventing editors such as yourself from imposing more harm on a murder victim's family. Snooganssnoogans (talk) 03:32, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
    • Your climate change points are not any proof against RS. Point 1 doesn't mean anything because that isn't reflected in any actual stories we can point to, nor is it a requirement for WP in reporting on CC stories that the news source has assert climate change is real in every story about climate change. Unless the source is spinning every climate change story in full outright denial mode, that doesn't make them unreliable (At worst, judging the latest CC stories they have run [29], [30], [31] they play just a bit into "skeptic" but they do not let that taint how they report the basic facts of these climate change reports, only just throwing in a para "skeptics say these there may be no climate change" langauge" somewhere. That's not wrong nor touches anything about their RSness. Your point two is using the headline of a story which is never considered reliable so we ignore that. On 3, its clearly misunderstanding the language of the emails as applied to the data per [32] (eg even that book gets the context wrong). So no, none of that proves Fox is not an RS. I wouldn't use them for CC news data only because I don't believe their bias would be helpful and other sources are tons better in terms of the basic science that is involved like NYTimes, but that doesn't rule it out.
    • On the whole thing with Rich, the "news" part of Fox that reported on the conspiracy was simply reporting it existed (that the Fox opinion desk side were going all crazy over it) and gave insight from the other side's denial nothing happened like that. Did they chase it down as well as the NYTimes or others? No. Is that a requirement for an RS? No (like the answer to the CC #1 above). All we are looking for is editorial control and fact-checking, which they did some. Not as extensive, and likely they were rushing to print (again, they have a bias) . And key to all that: They Redacted the story within the week [33] . Editorial control. That's all that matters for the RS factor. Now, that editors rushed to want to add it, that's a problem that we are not enforcing BLP, NOTNEWS, and RECENTISM especially with controversial claims from biased RSes. --Masem (t) 03:24, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
      • It was the news division that was behind the Seth Rich story! It was a Fox News scoop – not commentary by Sean Hannity. There would have been nothing for the opinion desk side of Fox News to get crazy over if not for the fabricated story by the straight news division. Snooganssnoogans (talk) 03:40, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 as long as we are clear we are not talking about their opinion or talk shows, but only their news programs or news portions of their websites which have been repeated shown to follow the expected editorial control we expect of RSes, biases notwithstanding. Bias does not discount a reliable source, though it is fair to raise the question (like this) if a bias has affected the reliability of a source. Their talk shows should be treated only as RSOPINION and used only when DUE is appropriate. I also point out as noted below this has been asked at least 3-4 times in a non-formal RFC (which is NOT required to include on RS/P) and the weight of those discussions be considered in this. --Masem (t) 03:02, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
    • How can the news division of Fox News be considered reliable when its reporters are instructed to promote climate change denial and when said straight-news reporters act upon these instructions and tell brazen falsehoods about climate change? Snooganssnoogans (talk) 03:10, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
      • Their reporters don't lie about climate change, but they give too much time to climate change deniers. Similarly, ABC, CBS, CNN, NBC, and the broadsheets gave way too much coverage to misleading pundits falsely claiming that Saddam Hussein had Weapons of Mass Destruction, in fact manipulating public opinion in favor of what would be a devastating military adventure. TFD (talk) 03:23, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
      • Do you have any examples of this that aren't over a decade old? If so, please provide them. Ten years is a long time in the politics and media world. 10 years ago Mitt Romney was the Republican presidential nominee-in-waiting; today he's one of the most vocal critics of the Republican president. 10 years ago Breitbart News was a generic conservative commentary site; nowadays it's a hard-right propaganda outlet. The layman's consensus in the US around climate change is much, much stronger than it was a decade ago. −−− Cactus Jack 🌵 03:48, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
        • Fox News, Nov 2018[34]: "NASA warns long cold winter could hit space in months bringing record low temperatures" – A complete misrepresentation of the science in order to promote a global cooling narrative.[35]
        • Fox News, Oct 2019[36]: "Explosion in Antarctic sea ice levels may cause another ice age" – A complete misrepresentation of the science in order to promote a global cooling narrative.[37].
        • Fox News, Feb 2017[38]: "Federal scientist cooked climate change books ahead of Obama presentation, whistle blower charges" – Giving credence to the dumb ravings of a climate change denier[39]. Snooganssnoogans (talk) 04:11, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
          • The Nov 2018 was a mistake several outlets made per Poynter and per Poyner "Like Metro, Fox and The Sun have also since corrected their stories." Editorial control. So not proof.
          • Oct 2019 story: As per Climate Feedback: "The Fox News article has been corrected..." Editorial control. though the fact they don't check with scientists of the work behind a paper before publishing the results of a paper is not great journalism but that's not a requirement under RS.
          • Feb 2017, this one is a bit different. If you read Fox's article, all claims of it are directly attributed to other sources and none to their own; the slowdown claim is from the whistleblower, and of course Daily Mail and Washington Times are used as other sources of information. Now, red flags go up in that I would not touch this story for use in any CC related article, but I stress that in terms of an RS, its not wrong. It doesn't go out of its way to say "this is bad understanding of a graph" but thats again, not a requirement of an RS, and in terms of discussion if someone said "We need to use this article", I would suspect that UNDUE factors from other less biased sources would be there. But again, nothing about that article says anything against being an RS. Just a biased source for CC claims. --Masem (t) 04:38, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
            • All the sources that also happened to make Fox News's "mistake" were sources which are considered generally unreliable or which have been deprecated (does the fact that The Sun sometimes runs corrections make it a reliable source with thorough editorial control? No, of course not). That's a clue as to what company Fox News belongs in. And it's entirely consistent with the existing academic literature on the broader network of right-wing disinformation that Fox News sits smack in the middle of. Snooganssnoogans (talk) 05:22, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 Just like CNN and MSNBC and all the other cable news channels, they have a news show and a talking head show. Their news is reliable, just as most of the other RS, even if they don't share the same bias as CNN or MSNBC. Sir Joseph (talk) 03:42, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
    • Baloney, this is the old false equivalence claim. Fox doesn't even try to be neutral, their biases are displayed on their sleeves for anyone to see. CNN and MSNBC keep their news operations separate from the opinion operations, but at Fox, it's all one bag -- that's precisely and entirely what Roger Ailes intended to create. You could see it in his programming on the pre-Fox "America's Talking" channel (that became MSNBC after they kicked Ailes out). His purpose has always been to create a conservative-leaning "news" channel which would counter the bias he perceived in CNN. He wasn't shy about declaring this, and the result is the biased, unreliable Fox News we have today. Beyond My Ken (talk) 05:58, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Not really commenting in the poll, but it’s worth pointing out that there is a substantial difference between Fox News TV and foxnews.com. The former can have some decent reporting depending on the reporter and anchor (also some real crap as has already been pointed out.) Foxnews.com makes the Daily Mail look like the New York Times, though. TonyBallioni (talk) 05:25, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3 for the most part. Fox News is reliable enough for run-of-the-mill news, but not for news regarding politics or anything connected to politics. They do not maintain a Chinese wall between their news operation and their opinion operations, and are blatantly biased in favor of Trump and the Republican Party, and against anything perceived to be liberal or (God forbid!) socialist. I have no opinion about the local stations, but would suggest that the owned-and-operated stations are more likely to hew to the Murdoch/Ailes model, while the affiliates would be independent operations. Beyond My Ken (talk) 05:58, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3 for the core news reporting (though there can always be exceptions), and option 4 for the pundits, talk shows, and opinion pieces. I fully agree with GPinkerton's and BD2412's assessments of Fox's lack of editorial diligence, and Aquillion has highlighted only a fraction of their misinformation campaign. Even setting my political bias aside, I do not trust their capability to report statements of fact. —⁠烏⁠Γ (kaw)  06:14, 08 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3 per JzG. Having read Network Propaganda, this is conclusively proven. Because you cannot rely on self-correction of mistakes, every piece from Fox News needs to be independently verified by the user and therefore citing Fox News ends up being an act of original research. There will be still things one can source to Fox News, for instance "Fox News thinks" or "Murdoch told on Fox News that". For right-wing perspectives one can always cite other prolific media like The Hill which, while clearly politically tinted, tends to be more matter-of-fact (for now). Nemo 08:31, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 Standard WP:NEWSORG with oversight. Yes it may have political leanings, but so does The Guardian, CNN and the majority of other media outlets. Yet I don't see them getting the same treatment as this. The C of E God Save the Queen! (talk) 09:39, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 I'd normally try to stay away from US politics as toxic but feel obliged to respond to RfC's listed at WP:CENT. I nominated the two most recent stories listed as blurbs at WP:ITN and so am familiar with their details. Looking at the coverage of these on Fox News ([40], [41]), this seems shallow but accurate and generally unexceptional. Andrew🐉(talk) 10:37, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 meets WP:NEWSORG with oversight just like CNN and MSNBC.Pharaoh of the Wizards (talk) 11:03, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3 mostly, Option 2 at best for core news reporting. Fox News has consistently peddled inaccurate/fake news, whether an hierarchical structure of a news organisation exists is irrelevant. Fox News also lacks the journalistic tradition of correcting their mistakes publicly in most cases - to state how widespread it is, I found an example in the last one day alone, WTVQ. For pundits and opinion pieces (Tucker Carlson, Laura Ingraham, Sean Hannity, et al.) it should strictly be Option 4 due their nature of sensationalizing news reporting and often making biased and inaccurate reporting. --qedk (t c) 14:55, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 - It either meets RS standards or not. Their core news department does meet WP:NEWSORG from what I can tell. Pundits and opinions should be handled by WP:NEWSBLOG. I think it is important for people to realize the distinction here and I think that is what is being missed by some. PackMecEng (talk) 15:25, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 One of the only major conservative news outlets, it is a source for reliable news. Just like CNN is considered reliable even though both news sites have a bias and tend to lead towards their political standing. It would be a shame to not count Fox news as reliable. Csar00 (talk) 15:50, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 It meets WP:NEWSORG. Fox News being a WP:BIASED does not severely affect it's reliability; it is not WP:QUESTIONABLE since it's not an "extremist". Now in the COVID-19 pandemic, eh a small difference in its reliability. Taking hydroxychloriquine is not recommended, warned Neil Cavuto to Fox News Viewers. Well then.
    .@FoxNews is no longer the same. We miss the great Roger Ailes. You have more anti-Trump people, by far, than ever before. Looking for a new outlet! Donald J. Trump 4:59, 19 May 2020 (UTC).
    That is enough to show that Fox News doesn't have bias that affects it's reliability. {{reply to|Can I Log In}}'s talk page! 16:40, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 for the news programming, Option 2 or 3 for the pundit programming. Nothing has really changed since the last RFC on this. Note- I would have the same opinion if we were discussing CNN or MSNBC. The problem is that too many of our editors have difficulty differentiating between news reporting, news analysis, and news commentary/opinion. Each needs to be handled differently. Blueboar (talk) 17:40, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 or Option 2. I think everyone here acknowledges Fox has a conservative bias. That alone is not enough to deem the network unreliable or to deprecate it, unless we also take a hard look at MSNBC. Calidum 18:10, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Comment A lot of responses in this thread so far are simply "reliable per NEWSORG" without any justification. I would like to present another story, the false claim that Omar Mateen had been radicalised by Marcus Dwayne Robertson. From The New Republic[17]:

    Since [Malia] Zimmerman joined Fox News in 2015, Fox News has repeatedly picked up her reporting and used it to legitimize the larger counter-narratives that form Fox News’s fevered worldview. These stories touched on alleged issues like voter fraud, gun confiscation, the Benghazi terrorist attack, the unmasking of Trump transition officials in confidential documents, and the murder of Seth Rich. Fox News has repeatedly picked up Zimmerman’s reporting and used it to legitimize the larger counter-narratives that form Fox News’s fevered worldview. In June 2016, shortly after the attack on the gay nightclub Pulse in Orlando that killed 49 people, Zimmerman reported that the shooter, Omar Mateen, had been radicalized by an imam and ex-con named Marcus Dwayne Robertson.

Citing anonymous law enforcement sources, Zimmerman alleged that Robertson had been “rounded up” in the wake of the attack and that Mateen had been radicalized while attending an online seminary run by Robertson. But Robertson and Mateen had never met. Furthermore, Robertson had never been “rounded up” by anyone. That didn’t stop Fox News from running with the story—or other outlets, including The Daily Beast, from picking it up—until it was finally debunked. Robertson was forced to defend himself on Greta Van Susteren’s Fox News show On the Record. As reporter David Gauvey Herbert wrote in Quartz[18] his explanation satisfied Susteren. But the damage was done. Zimmerman’s shadowy unnamed sources—whom Herbert and others have been unable to identify—fingered a man who had nothing to do with the terror attack and upended his life. Robertson lost his job and faced a barrage of death threats, despite having no connection to Mateen.

The story, which is still online[19] has not been corrected or retracted. Hemiauchenia (talk) 18:26, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
Why should it be retracted? Atsme Talk 📧 18:40, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
Maybe retracted is the wrong word, but there's no update on the story to indicate that the claims are no longer considered true. The only update on the story was adding Omar Mateen to the death count. Hemiauchenia (talk)
What claims? Please provide a link to the source that supports what you're saying because I don't know what you're talking about. Atsme Talk 📧 19:40, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
"or other outlets, including The Daily Beast, from picking it up" Would you argue that the other sources should be downgraded as well as Fox? I note that The Daily Beast was this year upgraded to a green source on PERENNIAL, should we reverse that? NPalgan2 (talk) 19:49, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
The problem with bad news stories is that they are like anecdotes, they don't tell you the hit rate. I don't think having reported a news story that later turns out to be incorrect is necessarily an issue of reliability, I mean look at the whole Covington thing. As the Perennial sources entry indicates, "Most editors consider The Daily Beast a biased or opinionated source. Some editors advise caution when using this source for controversial statements of fact related to living persons" Which is inline with them covering this story, as it involves BLPs. I would consider the Daily Beast a significantly lower quality source than something like the NYT or WashPo, and if something is being covered in the Daily Beast but not those would have to make a judgement if its use was appropriate. I called this RfC simply to get a new concensus on how reliable Fox News is, not because I have a vendetta against Fox News or conservatives. I would be happy to see Fox News retain its generally reliable rating at the end of this. Hemiauchenia (talk) 20:02, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2 There is clear bias in how they report certain things, and which things they report and which they don't. For instance, I believe they're the only news organization anyone would consider legitimate at all that tried to discuss the Michael Flynn "unmasking" issue as anything other than a right-wing conspiracy theory. They are okay on some factual matters, but we should use caution when citing Fox News. – Muboshgu (talk) 18:39, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Limited option 2 - Option 2 is very broad, so I'm going to say that Fox News is problematic on a significant amount of US political reporting. Outside of that, their flaw rate certainly is no worse that others that sources we consider generally reliable (which certainly doesn't require perfection by any means). That political reporting (reasonably construed) is not always flawed, but an appreciable amount is. As noted above, this is often on what is notreported (or not covered in depth) - this can make their reporting lack context, but may, or may not, mitigate on accuracy concerns about what is present. Nosebagbear (talk) 18:57, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3, certainly for anything related to science, politics, or COVID per Snoogans and also concerned about native advertising per BD2412. buidhe 19:16, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 on news reporting. I note that they use a considerable amount of AP content. Obviously does not apply to commentary.--Wehwalt (talk) 19:44, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Somewhere between Option 1 and Option 2 for their straight reporting with the usual sanity checks - newsorgs are only the first draft of history, but is the news side of Fox really so much worse than its peers? Certainly the Seth Rich article (three years ago) was a grotesque lapse of judgment, what of CNN letting Chris Cuomo lob softballs at his brother rather than press him on his atrocious response to the coronavirus? NPalgan2 (talk) 19:50, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
    NPalgan2, please avoid the whataboutism and keep an eye on your own POV. – Muboshgu (talk) 19:53, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
    Muboshgu, the whataboutism link you provided is to a WP article, not WP:PAG. On WP, the closest PAG I could find is the essay Wikipedia:Other stuff exists, which is both useful and useless, depending on context. The essay states: When used correctly, these comparisons are important as the encyclopedia should be consistent in the content that it provides or excludes. I'm of the mind that this is one of those instances where consistency is important. Some of the comments in this discussion remind me of The Atlantic article. I'm of the mind that when either side of an argument is silenced or intimidated into silence, it leads to a homogenous community that is incompatible with NPOV. Atsme Talk 📧 13:57, 11 June 2020 (UTC)
    A "whataboutism" is nevertheless an argument that should not be used and should be called out for what it is. I don't think we're using Cuomo on Cuomo interviews as anything other than an occasional source of amusement. – Muboshgu (talk) 18:51, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 and Comment. FOX News has had a front-row seat at the White House Press Briefing Room along with NBC, CBS, ABC and CNN for a very long time reporting on the activities of multiple presidencies, both Democrat and Republican. I believe that FOX News should be treated *the same way* as NBC, CBS, ABC and CNN. Also, to the OP User:Hemiauchenia, in the interest of transparency, could you please fill out your User Page with some information about yourself? Thank you. History DMZ (talk)+(ping) 20:13, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
    History DMZ, Please do not ask editors to post personal information. It is not required to post political opinions either. Please respect WP:PRIVACY. buidhe 20:27, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
    Buidhe, I never asked for *personal* information. I asked for *some* information. That can be userboxes, a short introduction, etc. Please don't put words in my mouth that I didn't speak. But to be clear, NO personal information was asked of the OP. Cordially, History DMZ (talk)+(ping) 20:34, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
    History DMZ, I can tell you that I don't really care for Hemiauchenia, despite the fact my account is named after it, having never edited the article. I do think the article (alongside that of Paleolama) are in need of serious work though. Hemiauchenia (talk) 20:41, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
    Hemiauchenia, thank you for your cordial and humorous reply. Perhaps what you just shared is TMI for some lol. But seriously, it wouldn't hurt if you introduced yourself a little to the community through your user page. It's *optional* of course. Cheers, History DMZ (talk)+(ping) 20:52, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
    History DMZ, The White House gave press passes to Infowars and OANN. That means literally nothing. Guy (help!) 12:19, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
    JzG, The Obama White House (2009-2017), whom I voted into office and hold no bias for or against, gave *front-row* press passes to FOX News and sat them next to NBC, CBS, ABC and CNN. That means a lot. Cordially, History DMZ (talk)+(ping) 18:02, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
    @History DMZ: that was then. They have totally changed because of Trump. It's a symbiotic relationship made in hell. They have moved from ordinary right-wing RS, to extreme right-wing allies of Russian propaganda defending Trump, no matter what, and we know he lies constantly. -- Valjean (talk) 05:42, 10 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 Far more reliable than its cable competitors such as the pathetic CNN or MSNBC that are little more than 24/7 coverage of "we hate Trump". Considering all the poorly worded tones of once reliable sources such as the NYTimes, the WaPo, BBC and simliar mostly print based news entities, FoxNews appears as reliable as as them overall. Since we shy away from posting news opinion pieces in most BLPs we also do so with cable based pundit commentary, or at least we should.--MONGO (talk) 20:43, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2, with Option 3 for political content. Speaking as a journalist, Fox News's news coverage, while better than its opinions commentary, still flouts the professional standards of the industry, and this has worsened since the prior RfC. The Seth Rich example (Poynter headline: "Fox News’s retraction is a woefully inadequate response to its colossal mistake") is just one of many. While it does often publish decent enough content, I agree with Nemo that anything we cite to it would have to be confirmed somewhere else more reliable, at which point it is no longer functioning as a source. {{u|Sdkb}}talk 20:46, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 - Opinion, punditry, and headlines aside, their straight news stuff is fine. Like SJ says, on par with CNN, MSNBC, or any other cable news. (Well, better actually than some cable news, like OANN and Newsmax.) I agree with Masem's comments above that making mistakes and correcting them later is not a sign of unreliability. I think it's quite the opposite in fact. Fox News is not a top-tier source and can usually be replaced by a better source, but it's an RS, when used properly. By the way, we just did this last year. [42] Levivich[dubiousdiscuss] 20:48, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1- How many more of these discussions do we need to have. Sure I understand that consensus can change, but having the same exact discussion every other month just because there is a group of people who hate Fox News is a massive waste of time. It is at least as reliable as its competitor CNN and we haven't banned that as a source yet.--Rusf10 (talk) 23:20, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 Reliable. Elizium23 (talk) 23:27, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 Per Atsme. Shinealittlelight (talk) 00:05, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 As far as actual factual reporting they seem to do about as well as most NewsOrgs. They post their corrections which are easy to call out. Not a huge fan of what they choose to write about but that doesn't make it unreliable. The Punditry is hot garbage but then most punditry isn't reliable anyway.AlmostFrancis (talk) 00:13, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Options 1 to 4. The news department will generally get "sky is blue" type facts right. They still get all the way over into reporting debunked information, which is sometimes called out by other members of the team, but not always.
Are they "reliable for US Politics"? Hell no. Ask yourself if their reporting deviates from what all other mainstream news sources report. If someone can't see that there is a huge difference between their reporting and the reporting from the rest of mainstream media, they are blind. If they do see the difference, and still consider Fox News generally reliable for US politics, they don't know what's really happening, are buying the GOP party line without thinking, and don't know how to vet sources for reliability. Note that such people consistently hate fact-checking sources.
Keep in mind that research shows that Watching Only Fox News Makes You Less Informed Than Watching No News At All
Fox News was created by Roger Ailes to be a voice for the GOP, not a real "news" station. It's their propaganda channel. With the arrival of Trump, they have gone from normal right-wing (which can be opinionated, but still reliable) to extreme right-wing (which, like extreme left-wing, are not reliable) and often repeat Russian talking points, the exact same ones being pushed by RT and Sputnik, which are Russian propaganda channels. That is very worrying.-- Valjean (talk) 00:18, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
Valjean, for the sake of academic clarity - two FDU professors that were involved in the original New Jersey and later international polling (your link above), Peter J. Woolley and Dan Cassino, explained the misleading results by the news media as follows: "Does Fox News make you dumb? No, but that was the headline generated by news aggregators re-reporting research by Fairleigh Dickinson University‘s PublicMind." They closed with the following statement: We never said, nor meant to say, that Fox viewers are dumb — or MSNBC viewers for that matter. They’re no better or worse than the average respondents. Clearly, anyone who is dumb and watching TV was dumb when he or she sat down in front of the tube. Some news sources just don’t help matters any. Atsme Talk 📧 17:55, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
To Atsme - Results from the 2012 Fairleigh Dickinson University (FDU) survey that Valjean reported on (above) found that "Fox News viewers were less informed about current events than people who didn't follow the news at all." [43] That's the result of their study. So it's best to avoid getting hung-up on a headline & instead focus on the results of the study. BetsyRMadison (talk) 20:19, 17 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2. Great to be here. Lots of folks out there are saying Option 1 and many are saying Option 3, but I like Option 2. In my experience, the reliability of the "News Division" of Fox News has gone down over recent years. I don't think enough people here are talking about that. For me, since Shepard Smith left,[44] their standards have started to lax. According to Brian Stelter, Smith wasn't the only person in the News Division to leave, and he reported that Fox News executives are mainly trying to head the company away from prioritizing actual journalism in their coverage.[45] Regardless, it is certainly clear that they have changed in some way over time.[46]
    While writing this comment, I did some digging. I wanted a reliable source to tell me how other reliable sources think things are. It's easy to get caught up in your own perceptions of things, so I wanted something outside my own biases. What I found was this article. It's answer: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
    It's not clear, and no one knows for sure. We can debate it all we want, but we're never going to get a satisfactory answer out of this question besides (to me) Option 2. –MJLTalk 02:21, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
  • It keeps coming up, because it's such a hard case. Ultimately, I land [close enough to] Option 2 for the news, except for politics which is somewhere between 2-3. Certainly the pundits/talk shows can range anywhere from option 2-4, depending, but the news content is ok for a lot of subjects. I think where it's hardest is when it comes to story selection and word choice in matters of US politics, culture wars, crime, etc. Fox doesn't regularly simply get it wrong and doesn't often contradict other sources on the basic facts, but will cover some things that don't get any traction elsewhere and is more likely to use particular kinds of language to cover those stories, exploiting fears and stoking outrage (like one they've gotten some flack for in the past is "thug" -- for which they're certainly not the only one, of course). These kinds of editorial decisions and framing language have a decidedly negative impact on the accuracy of the content. They're not alone in doing this, but have incorporated it as a fundamental approach, executed in consistent ways. For example, the study that showed that people who watch no news can answer questions about current events more accurately than someone who watches Fox. For the record, I don't think local affiliates should be part of this RfC. — Rhododendrites talk \\ 04:18, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2, generally. Mostly per all of the above. I'd also add that Fox tends to be a good source in terms of determining what the Republican Party's stance on an issue is. This is roughly in line with my opinion on the merits of including Xinhua or CGTN as a barometer of the "official stance" of the CCP. OhKayeSierra (talk) 04:40, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2: The arguments that Fox News is generally reliable because of WP:NEWSORG aren't convincing. This specific part of the RS content guideline reflects general consensus for the entire class of sources that are news organizations, and the following are not the same:
    • generally considered to be reliable (from WP:NEWSORG, bolding mine)
    • considered to be generally reliable (an apparently common interpretation here)
    When it comes to an RfC to determine the consensus on the individual reliability of a particular news organization, it's a very weak argument to just say that Fox News is a news organization and then point to the massively general group of news organizations. We need to identify whether the particular news organization engages in fact-checking and has a reputation for accuracy
    There is problematic journalism by Fox News, which is elaborated by (among others): JzG and Aquillion regarding misinformation and inaccuracies, Snooganssnoogans and Aquillion regarding climate change and conspiracy theories, Aquillion regarding academic studies on the priority given to ideology, and Sdkb and MJL regarding general journalistic standards.
    Fox News does have editorial oversight, yes, but the existence of an editorial team doesn't guarantee reliability. The quality and standards of that editorial process is not at the same level expected of a generally reliable source (bolding mine):

    The source has a reputation for fact-checking, accuracy, and error-correction, often in the form of a strong editorial team.

    The historical level of journalism over the past decade requires editors to pay significant attention to individual articles, in many contexts, before they can be used as references. — MarkH21talk 05:05, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
  • (edit conflict) (Standard disclaimer of I'mabout their opinion/commentary, which is a solid "4", but just the actual news...) Either 3 or 4 overall, and its questionable assessment of appropriate weight means it absolutely should not be used in assessing WP:DUE; probably 2 for the basic facts themselves. I don't think it's the worst offender in regular use on ENWP; it tends to get basic facts right more than it gets them wrong (admittedly a shamefully low bar to set); it strikes me as only a dull roar of awfulness surrounded by a sea of utter journalistic tripe. I'd rank it substantially below "real" reporting — Reuters, AP, NYT — but a bit above all the tabloid-y rags like Huffington Post, Daily Beast, Washington Examiner, Complex, etc. By all means let's ditch Fox, but let's also take care of the tabloid infestation while we're at it! —{{u|Goldenshimmer}} (they/them)|TalkContributions 06:01, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3 per JzG, Devonian Wombat, Aquillion, Snooganssnoogans, etc. Gamaliel (talk) 12:13, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2 1/2 My feelings mirror that of BD2412 for national programming fairly closely. I live in a very small television market, but I would have to say Option 1 for local affiliate news programming. My local station, WEUX contracts with the NBC affiliate for news programming. -- Dolotta (talk) 15:12, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1: Respectable WP:NEWSORG with editorial control no different then NYT --Shrike (talk) 17:03, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
    Shrike, oh, I can think of some differences :-) Levivich[dubiousdiscuss] 18:12, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
  • I haven't done any investigation of the issue myself, but just looking at this thread, the points put forward by User:Masem are a lot more convincing than any of the points set out by those arguing against (many of which bring up things which aren't relevant to reliability). --Yair rand (talk) 21:02, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2/3. I think by now it is clear that the pundit shows are not included in this analysis. That said, Fox has shown a top-to-bottom willingness to slant coverage, to use misleading headlines, chyrons, tickers, etc., to give mouthpieces for despicable views a platform, to present conspiracy theories as facts, etc. WP:NEWSORG does not apply when a source has a well-established pattern and editorial direction that allows rumors and untruths (NB:untruths are different from usual journalistic mistruths) to be reported as facts. This is not merely bias. Unfortunately, a blanket statement about which of those options applies is impossible because the reliability varies depending on context, story subject, and even time slot. Eggishorn (talk) (contrib) 22:31, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3 Per Aquillion, Snooganssnoogans, and Guy. Everyday non-political/scientific event reporting is fine, but their record in fact-checking and explicit error correction is unacceptable. JoelleJay (talk) 23:49, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1. treat the same as CNN, NYT, etc. As with any source, my first check is whether or not they have a corrections process and/or policy. They do. [47] Sure, they have gotten stories wrong, and corrected themselves, but then again they didn't treat us to 2 years of Russia Hoax, either. Their bias seems to be less of an issue than with, for example, CNN, which has broadcast 10 interviews of Andrew Cuomo by Chris Cuomo [48]. Additionally, the inclusion of Fox as a "gold-standard" source would give Wikipedia some sorely-needed political diversity in its "gold standard" sourcing on US politics, something we lack if we treat it any less than CNN, NYT, etc. Adoring nanny (talk) 01:55, 10 June 2020 (UTC)
    • @Adoring nanny: "they didn't treat us to 2 years of Russia Hoax, either". Therein lies the rub. Editors who think that Fox News constant pushing of the completely false conspiracy theory that the proven fact that Russia interfered in the election to help Trump win (that is the narrative from all RS) is a "Russia hoax" have swallowed the kool-aid served daily by Fox News. No wonder the votes for Option 1. They actually see that there is a huge difference between the counterfactual narrative pushed by Fox News, RT, Sputnik, Breitbart, Bongino, and all other fringe sources, and the factual narrative documented by all mainstream sources (IOW the ones we consider RS), and seeing that difference, they still believe the false conspiracy theories because they have been deceived into believing Trump's lie that mainstream media are fake news. No wonder we have this problem. They don't know how to vet sources. Fox Fake News is treated by them as equal to CNN, ABC, BBC, etc. No, there is a world of difference. -- Valjean (talk) 05:35, 10 June 2020 (UTC)
      • The hoax is the assertion that Trump colluded with the Russians. Adoring nanny (talk) 11:13, 10 June 2020 (UTC)
        • @Adoring nanny: that's not the only part denied by Fox News, but, just to keep the terminology correct, the Mueller Report was not able to collect enough evidence (because of Trump's proven obstruction of the investigation) to prove "conspiracy"/"coordination", but did describe numerous examples of what could be considered collusion/co-operation/invitation/facilitation, which is not a crime, just disloyal to the interests of the United States. Trump and Fox News still attempt to deny/downplay that Russia interfered, and the term "Russia hoax" includes that, not just the part about collusion/no collusion. Trump has still not done anything to prevent the current disruption of the elections and has stated he would accept foreign interference to help him, and that he might not even notify the FBI, which would make him vulnerable to blackmail by foreign bad actors like Russia. -- Valjean (talk) 16:35, 10 June 2020 (UTC)
          • MR. CLAPPER: Well, no, it's not. I never saw any direct empirical evidence that the Trump campaign or someone in it was plotting/conspiring with the Russians to meddle with the election [49]. So Fox was right about that all along. A fine example of why we need them as a first-class source. Adoring nanny (talk) 21:32, 10 June 2020 (UTC)
            • You seem to be ignoring the difference between "conspiracy" and co-operation/collusion. Mueller describes the Trump campaign's actions quite well as "the two parties taking actions that were informed by or responsive to the other's actions or interests." The Trump campaign did take myriad proven "actions that were informed by or responsive to the other's actions or interests", but without evidence of a formal written or spoken agreement, conspiracy could not be proven, even if everything done, and the results of those actions, indicated that such an understanding existed, regardless of whether a formal "agreement" existed. Conspirators usually avoid leaving such evidence.
Starting in 2015, EIGHT foreign allied intelligence agencies reported to the FBI that numerous Trump campaign members and associates were secretly meeting with known Russian intelligence agents (who were being monitored). The campaign lied about all these contacts. Their conversations were so worrying and a threat to American democracy that those intelligence agencies reported their findings to the FBI (and maybe CIA). The Trump campaign was deeply involved with Russian intelligence, and we saw the results. That's collusion (or unproven conspiracy), no matter how it's defined. Fox News will not tell you any of that, but RS do, and our articles here do.
There is a huge difference in the coverage by Fox News and mainstream news. Fox News paints Trump and his campaign as innocent victims of a witch hunt, when all the suspicion was actually justified and a result of the campaign's own actions. Trump's continued refusals to condemn the interference and constant cozying up to Putin doesn't help. Now he's threatening to withdraw American troops from Germany, which is a nice gift to Putin.
The Steele Dossier alleged “a well-developed conspiracy of co-operation". Well guess what. Even though the "conspiracy" was not proven, what actually happened was loads of proven "co-operation". Fox News ignores what actually happened and focuses on what was not proven. How convenient. Trump is still "co-operating" with Putin, and that's very wrong. -- Valjean (talk) 00:35, 11 June 2020 (UTC)
There is zero requirement that a RS tell a complete story. Obviously we give more credibility to the sources that have routinely shown commitment to tell the full story and follow up as needed (NYTimes) but plenty of other high-quality RSes will go to press with 3/4ths of the story and may update as the go along or the like (like CNN). Omission by choice of part of the story is also acceptable but of course this might depends on what's omitted and why. If a story involves a rumor about X and the publication doesn't even attempt to reach X to ask about it, that's iffy, while when a source does try to reach out to X and gets no response, they'll say that. Fox will omit parts of stories, this is not in doubt, and this leads to their bias, but it doesn't change their reliability in a big-picture sense. I would say that if a source is making so many omissions in a story to make it swiss cheese and or to actually make it swing a totally different way by omission of essential details, then we'd have a problem but that's not what Fox does. --Masem (t) 00:50, 11 June 2020 (UTC)
Masem, I agree with everything except the last part. Fox News consistently ignores or downplays anything that is negative about Trump. That's classic pseudoscientific "journalism", because it's agenda-driven reporting. It's not real journalism. It's propaganda. They paint a totally different picture than the picture painted by all the mainstream sources, and that is not by accident. It's not a bug that they ignore "essential details" and end up pushing counterfactual narratives. They do it so egregiously that Shep Smith and Wallace were constantly having to call out the others. That's problematic. -- Valjean (talk) 00:57, 11 June 2020 (UTC)
Ahem, on their front page as of right now we have Pence criticized after meeting with packed room of trump campaign staff ignoring social distancing guidelines, with a big photo on their main page. Adoring nanny (talk) 22:31, 11 June 2020 (UTC)
Yes, they actually document how Democrats criticize Pence. Nothing new about that. Now find examples of them criticizing Trump and you'll have examples of the exception that proves the rule, IOW proof that they rarely do it themselves. Such examples do exist, and they are remarkable, showing that they exceptionally rise to the standards of proper journalism they routinely violate. -- Valjean (talk) 02:03, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
From what I've read throughout this RfC, the opposition to FN is not convincing. Journalistic opinion in the media has become the norm as I've already demonstrated in this month's Signpost Op-Ed. Fox News has covered stories that others in MSM have refused to cover...at least until they basically had no choice but to cover it...Tara Reade comes to mind. As editors, we are responsible for encyclopedic content - not political rhetoric and speculation. Going back and forth over a RS not publishing what we expect per our POV vs another RS publishing what aligns with our POV - despite it being pure speculation in many cases (such as the Steele dossier and the Russian collusion conspiracy theory) - is what RECENTISM actually prevents from being included in our encyclopedia, and helps avoid the criticism we've been seeing in the media regarding WP having a leftist slant when our articles should be touted as being neutral. This problem is growing and it needs resolution for the sake of the project. Atsme Talk 📧 22:56, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
WP:Recentism doesn't prevent the inclusion of that content, although I have repeatedly seen it invoked in that context with the meaning that "we will prevent anything negative about Trump from being included until we see RS reporting only positive content about him, and only then will we allow it." That version of "recentism" is not according to policy. No, we use RS as they appear en masse (IOW when multiple RS report something), and we don't wait until our preferred version appears in RS. What we do is document what RS say now (sometimes waiting a few days to avoid violating "recentism"), and we update and revise content if the narrative and details in RS change, and that is what has been happening with that content you mention. The multiple attempts to completely delete the Steele dossier article have always been against multiple existing policies and have revealed a politically-driven agenda, not a policy-based agenda. -- Valjean (talk) 00:25, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
While we arguably can use the present attitudes of the press en masse and change as time goes along, as you suggest, this is what leads to at least 50% of the problems in the AP2 ArbCom discretionary area because editors are rushing to include the latest commentary about a topic. We'd have a lot smoother editing process overall if NOT#NEWS and RECENTISM were considered to avoid the rush to include media commentary until we have a better idea of how to frame everything about it and the long-term picture. Yes, ultimately we'd get to the same place but one is far less strive-ridden, and deals with things like the issues around Fox's bias, for example. We are writing for the long-term , not the short term (that's Wikinews if you really want that). and that means avoiding certain material that may be readily available in the press "now" until we now how best to write about it "later" from more academic more distant sources. --Masem (t) 22:08, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 as a standard American news org. Obviously they have pundits and talkshows, and common sense must be used just like with any source. In his 2014 book Partisan Journalism: A History of Media Bias in the United States, Virginia Tech media professor Jim A. Kuypers wrote that partisan journalism is a very widespread and old phenomenon in the mainstream US news. I would not muddy the waters between reliable and opinionated sources further, and strongly oppose popularity contests of singling out news orgs from a partisan media field for this reason. --Pudeo (talk) 08:50, 10 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2: This is my first time participating in something like this, so weight it accordingly, but I found more persuasive arguments in favour of anything less than Option 1 which is mainly citing WP:NEWSORG or bothsideism, among other flawed rationales (see the Russia hoax claim or the argument that, along with other news outlets, Fox had the front-row seat at the White House Press Briefing Room; InfoWars and other unreliable news outlets have been invited too). Certainly, I disagree with the current wording of Some editors perceive FOX News to be a biased source whereas others do not; neither affects reliability of the source which should probably reflect the change in recent years to Most editors consider Fox a biased or opinionated source. Some editors advise caution when using this source for controversial statements of fact related to living persons like The Daily Beast (I do not have any opinion yet on whether it should be demoted, I trust the consensus; and I do not think that we should demote it just to compensate for a possible demotion of Fox as a bothsideism). The difference between the two is that, as MarkH21 put it, Fox may now considered to be generally reliable which is different from generally considered to be reliable for the green box and the overcited NEWSORG. I also agree with Goldenshimmer assessment that Fox is closer to the Huffington Post (which is currently yellow) and others mentioned than the AP, The New York Times and Reuters which, if anything and like Wikipedia (for those who claim Wikipedia to have a left bias), have a centrist bias rather than left bias, at best centre-left and mainly on socio-cultural issues. Finally, if we are going to prefer those sources over Fox anyway and we need those sources to confirm whether Fox was reliable or not on a case-by-case analysis, we are already following Option 2.--Davide King (talk) 11:13, 10 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 as generally reliable per WP:NEWSORG for factual reporting. Talking head punditry stuff is rarely used in articles and where used is attributed as it should be. an important news source which expands into subject areas other NEWSORGs may not. -- Netoholic @ 16:42, 10 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3 - the discussion here is convincing me that this is a terrible source even for news. Option 2 as second choice. If a local affiliate has a news story that's worth noting, it'll be in less tainted sources - David Gerard (talk) 19:55, 10 June 2020 (UTC) Changing this to Option 4, given the deliberate fabrication of news story photos - deliberate fabrication is deprecation material - David Gerard (talk) 10:44, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2 I would be fine with option 1 also, but from the discussion it seems that there are "additional considerations" as to the division between reporting and editorials. I prefer option 2 because it allows us to make that distinction clear since unlike many other news organizations brought up, their editorials are generally not reliable for information. Wug·a·po·des 00:04, 11 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3: better sources are available w/o the risk of running into misinformation or conspiracy theories. If Fox is the only media org covering a certain issue, then it's probably undue anyway. --K.e.coffman (talk) 02:37, 11 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2: Local affiliate stations are generally reliable, but the Fox News Network has reliability problems when it comes to certain topics such as climate change[50], the George Floyd protests[51], and the Trump Administration[52]. I would favor deprecating it as a reliable source for topics on which it has demonstrated a history of misleading coverage. Kaldari (talk) 03:33, 11 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 generally reliable as a news org. Yes, they have pundits with a bias that most Wikipedians don't share, but this isn't about that. LEPRICAVARK (talk) 13:30, 11 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 4 FACT: Ofcom in the UK are unlikely to award a licence to Fox News as they are not impartial: "British media regulator Ofcom has concluded that Fox News programs featuring Sean Hannity and Tucker Carlson violated the U.K.’s broadcasting code by breaching impartiality rules...Sky dropped Fox News from its UK lineup in August, but Ofcom has continued to investigate complaints about shows that aired before the channel went dark. The regulator said Monday that both “Tucker Carlson Tonight” and “Hannity” broke the rules on the “due impartiality” expected of news coverage in Britain.[20][21] SethWhales talk 20:42, 11 June 2020 (UTC)
@Seth Whales: The RfC specifically mentions "as separate from their cable pundits" to avoid confusion and to solely focus on Fox News general reporting. Tucker Carlson and Sean Hannity both fall under the "Cable pundit" classification, and there's no way that anything from their programmes should be cited in wikivoice to begin with, only as attributed opinion under specific circumstances where the comments were found to be independently notable. Hemiauchenia (talk) 20:18, 11 June 2020 (UTC)
  • The "pundits" and any "news coverage" are inseparable. They may show the same television pictures, but it is the commentary that is all important that goes with it. I remain Option 4 SethWhales talk 20:42, 11 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1. We're beating a dead horse at this point, and I think it's time to drop the stick. Yes, Fox is biased. So is almost every other major US news outlet, like NYT, NBC, and CNN. Fox is a standard WP:NEWSORG. JOEBRO64 21:28, 11 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 Fox has its biases, as do all of the networks and the NY Times and WaPo etc. But it is a generally reliable source when reporting factual stories. I realize that Fox's editorial biases are unpopular around here but this never ending attempt to blacklist Fox is getting old. It reminds me of the old expression "the voting shall continue until the correct result is returned." And I for one am concerned about what appears to be an insidious drift towards creating an ideological bubble into which all sources to be considered RS must fall. There is already widespread suspicion among conservatives of a leftwing bias on the project. These endless attacks on Fox News only add fuel to that fire. -Ad Orientem (talk) 22:46, 11 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 per numerous arguments showing that Fox News meets all WP:RS criteria for editorial oversight. All news sources have bias, and as long as we distinguish opinion from reporting, Fox is no different from CNN. — JFG talk 22:53, 11 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 I think that Masem is correct. As far as the news programs go, they are perfectly comparable to CNN, MSNBC, BBC, CBC and other news sources that Wikipedia already uses all the time. Talrolande (talk) 01:18, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 per Ad Orientem. This sort of partisanship is disgusting. Chris Troutman (talk) 01:26, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 FoxNews definitely meets WP:NEWSORG; and while biased so too are CNN, The Guardian, NYT, MSNBC, etc. but they are allowed. I fear this RfC would be used to get around WP:NPOV. The solution to bias in reporting by a right leaning source is to simply add text sourced to a left leaning source and vice versa. If we go down the slippery slope of banning major right leaning news sources then we will bias our content and gain a reputation of censorship and partisanship and then our article quality will deteriorate and we will be seen to be a biased source that fewer people take seriously. Finally, FoxNews does an enormous amount of reporting on neutral non political matters. Conclusion: right leaning sources are just as welcome as left leaning sources on the NPOV encyclopedia that anyone can edit.--Literaturegeek | T@1k? 01:48, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Comment: Yes, every other news outlets may have a bias (certainly more centrist bias than the often overused left bias; The Canary and Occupy Democrats are red) but not all biases are the same and they do not affect factual reporting, whether Fox's bias seems to be stronger that it affects its reporting more often that all those news outlets mentioned and this is something to consider. So clearly, if bothsideism is the best rationale one can offer for Option 1 as it is the most cited along with WP:NEWSORG, I am not impressed. There are better more right-leaning sources anyway. A change from Some editors perceive FOX News to be a biased source whereas others do not; neither affects reliability of the source to Most editors consider Fox a biased or opinionated source. Some editors advise caution when using this source for controversial statements of fact related to living persons (even while remaining green) seems to be at least warranted.--Davide King (talk) 08:02, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Either Option 1 or Option 4 - Every single thing said above in terms of Fox being a WP:NEWSORG is also true of the Daily Mail, the Daily Mail also has an editorial team, it also covers actual news stories, it also has a front-row seat at various events. It also shares all of the DM's vices in terms of tabloidism. The DM ban (let's not try to pretend that it is anything but a ban) was an example of primarily US-based editors finding it easy to deprecate the media of another country, this RFC shows that many of them are not capable of applying the same standards to a source closer to home. Therefore, either Fox is generally reliable as a WP:NEWSORG (but so, within the limits of tabloidism, is the DM) or Fox should be deprecated along with the DM. Personally, I deplore these RFCs on general reliability of WP:NEWSORGs in countries where media can generally operate freely, and think them no better than popularity contests pillorying "bad" media, completely detached from the actual contexts in which editors actually wish to use these sources. FOARP (talk) 09:38, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1, with a little bit of 2 for US politics. Yes, they have editorial bias, so does pretty much every news outlet. I'm aware that elements of the "woke brigade" want to rule them out of existence. That's not Wikipedia's role. Stifle (talk) 10:57, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Question: why isn't this decision based on existing academic research instead of opinion Rather than base this decision on opinion it would be helpful to bring in academic studies of media reliability, many professional researchers have spent years collecting evidence on this question. That would give us something to work from and also provide information on if Wikipedia should separate reliability of the website and the TV channel or by subject, e.g Fox News is currently being sued for “knowingly disseminated false, erroneous, and incomplete information”. Wikipedia is based on reliable sources, I suggest it makes sense to decide what reliable sources are through in depth analysis which many people have already done. John Cummings (talk) 12:31, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2: I see a lot of good pieces of evidence above, including the Business Insider report, the Ofcom finding and MJL's comment. I would like to add to the discussion the fact that we are a global encyclopedia and America's "left-wing" and "right-wing" are not that of the world. We here in Europe might find some things said on CNN to be right-wing-only talking points. Those afraid that we may have listed too many left-wing sources as reliable and too many right-wing sources as unreliable might do well to remember that this is a nationality-specific claim. I'd like to suggest some general principles: biased for international reporting, where Fox's Overton window may be wildly off; biased for U.S. politics (including reports on protests and human rights movements); generally factually accurate for events that are not capital P political; use only with care for business-related content (per BD2412's very worrying comment); treat pundits as WP:SPS. Some are discussing Fox's climate change denial but no news media is suitable for scientific content in this way anyway; it is, however, something to bear in mind for e.g. climate change protest coverage, or coverage of a person's views on a scientific issue. — Bilorv (Black Lives Matter) 12:45, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2 This is the type of thing that needs to be decided on a case by case basis. If, for example, someone was writing/editing an article about say, a plane crash for example, and a Fox News segment about that crash stated the names of the pilots, there would be no reason to assume that that information is made up. This is true of any news station. Empirical claims about objective facts made by a prominent news station are unlikely to have been fabricated. As far as other kinds of claims are concerned, any news station, not just Fox, should be taken with a grain of salt, and only be used as a source if the individual editor makes a judgement call to include it. A Google Scholar search for 'Fox News bias' brings a number of studies, but so does the same search for CNN. Media outlets in general are designed to appeal to a target audience, and are not designed to be entirely factual. According to mediabiasfactcheck.com, Fox and CNN are equally biased. It's not a question of which station is being used as a source, it's just about whether or not a better source can be found. Peer reviewed journals will always take precedence over news stations, regardless of the station. --PuzzledvegetableIs it teatime already? 15:27, 12 June 2020 (UTC) + strikethrough in response to following comment --PuzzledvegetableIs it teatime already? 02:55, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
    Puzzledvegetable, WP:MBFC is rated generally unreliable and self-published. It's not a good source for the reliability of other sources. buidhe 17:54, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 The news programs on Fox News are as reliable as the news programs on other cable news channels, such as CNN and MSNBC. I'm going to be very blunt and just state the obvious: Fox News is not much liked around here (on Wikipedia) because of the political slant of the commentary in its opinion shows. That does not render the factual reporting on its news programs any more unreliable than the news reporting on CNN or MSNBC (which, I note, also have a very heavy slant in their opinion programs, albeit a slant that many more Wikipedians feel comfortable with). The commentary programs on Fox News are obviously unreliable for statements of fact, just like the commentary from any opinion column is unreliable for statements of fact. The factual reporting in news articles on foxnews.com is generally reliable. There are political biases in which stories Fox News chooses to cover, just as there are political biases in which stories CNN and MSNBC choose to cover. And for certain categories of information, I would consider all three generally unreliable (e.g., WP:MEDRS content). Why am I comparing Fox News to CNN and MSNBC? Because those two channels are very comparable to Fox News - they're cable news channels with strong political biases and a clear partisan affiliation. Yet I don't think we'll see many calls for them to be considered unreliable, because their political biases better align with the views of most Wikipedians. -Thucydides411 (talk) 19:09, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
  Like -Ad Orientem (talk) 19:14, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
  Like - Atsme Talk 📧 23:23, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
  Like - Urgal (talk) 07:55, 23 June 2020 (UTC)
  Like - DoubleCross () 14:22, 26 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 4. I'd like everyone to see this article from The Seattle Times that shows Fox News digitally altering images to misrepresent the current situation in Seattle. This is not their first act of news manipulation and far from the last. SounderBruce 05:26, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
    • As noted below: photos like headlines and other material around an article should not be taken as the work of the reporters or editorial desk and should not be used to judge the reliability of the content. Bias, absolutely. --Masem (t) 05:43, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
    Interesting. Now before FOX news gets deprecated, Jan 2019, Seattle FOX affiliate KCPQ (Q13 FOX) altered a video of Trump.[22] One of the additional questions to this RfC is Do local affiliate stations have a separate reliability to the main Fox News operation? Possibly not, but most likely not when reporting national news since affiliates use their national news affiliation. {{reply to|Can I Log In}}'s talk page! 18:06, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3: A 2015 fact-check of Fox News pundits by punditfact found that "about 60 percent of the claims checked have been rated Mostly False or worse". In terms of international affairs, Fox News always restates the American government positions uncritically, presenting the administrations' propaganda as facts. An example of this is its coverage of the assassination of Qassem Soleimani in January 2020. [53] [54]. Mottezen (talk) 07:49, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Comment Comparing Fox News to CNN or MSNBC is not an argument. Only Fox News is being discussed here. Mottezen (talk) 07:49, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 34 FFS, if they are doing a daily mirror and faking photos that should be a no there and then. That was not "The Colin the Conservative show" that was Fox news (you know the people who fought for lies to be counted as free speech). Sorry that pushes them over into 3 for me, and its borderline 4.Slatersteven (talk) 09:29, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3 We can't honestly separate out the propagandistic tactics like digitially faking images just because the reporters might not be involved. Whoever makes the decision, whoever implements the dirty work, that's the content they choose to show the world. By their fruits shall ye know them. XOR'easter (talk) 16:11, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3 at least and preferably Option 4 Reporting rumor as fact and not even bothering to delinieate between the two as well as faking pics and editing other videos to distort what happned is beyond the pale. MarnetteD|Talk 17:58, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3 a news organisation that recieves talking points from a Republican adminstration that pedals in conspiracy theories an obsfucation. Acousmana (talk) 18:54, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1. It's my understanding that the news stories reported by Fox News can normally also be confirmed by reporting in other sources whose reliability is less controversial. For example, the lead story currently on FoxNews.com is "Seattle police chief and mayor at loggerheads over handling of George Floyd protests, autonomous area". For comparison, see the article on KOMO-TV's website (the Seattle ABC network affiliate), "Mayor Durkan, SPD Chief Best put on united front in public, but tensions remain". The Fox News article may emphasize certain aspects of the story more than other news sources might, but that does not make it inaccurate. --Metropolitan90 (talk) 20:59, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
    That's pretty much the opposite of how it goes with a site given to fabrication, like Fox News - the non-fabricated stories also being findable in non-fabricating news sites was part of the justification to deprecate the WP:DAILYMAIL - David Gerard (talk) 21:35, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
    No evidence has been presented of Fox News fabricating the news parts of stories from the news desk. Reporting that has been fixed via errate, yes (but that's eexpect), and tclear evidence of bias due to which angle they take in cover but which does not eliminate a source from being an RS. But intentional fabrication that has never been corrected or addressed , like there was with the DM and Brietbart cases, has yet to be shown. --Masem (t) 21:47, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
    @Masem: Fox News fabricated quotes of John Kerry in 2004, see these stories in The Guardian [23] and The New York Times [24]Hemiauchenia (talk) 21:52, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
Which, as your ref points out, Fox apologized and corrected, expected of RSes when mistakes are made. We're talking cases where , in the situation of DM, they falsified quotes and when challenged, said nothing, and didn't change anything. It was obvious DM wanted to keep the fabrication. Now, we can play the hypothetical thought game if Fox "intentionally" used the misattributed quotes with plans to revoke later if they were challenged, but we can't make that presumption without further evidence of this. There's nothing to objectively doubt their rational of "fatique" that lead to the misuse of those quotes. --Masem (t) 22:00, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
There was also that ridiculous case in which the Daily Mail had two articles prepared for the Amanda Knox verdict before the verdict was even announced and accidentally published the wrong one, complete with fabricated quotes, events, and everything. I don't think Fox can even get close to that. JOEBRO64 22:27, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1. Photos and headlines should not be relied upon regardless of the source. Furthermore Fox's talk shows/opinion pieces are already treated differently than its core news reporting, which is generally reliable.--Tdl1060 (talk) 22:30, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2 generally but Option 3 for all politics and science subjects Fox News pundits/opinion pieces should not be considered reliable and should be deprecated across the board (they don't appear to be used all that much), but given the deterioration of the reliability of Fox News over the last ten years and the linked examples of editorial direction to downplay science and support Trump's lies, all Fox News citations about science or politics should be attributed in-text at a minimum ie "According to Fox News,...". Based on their demonstrated bias, the weight given to Fox News news reports should be significantly reduced. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 00:20, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 4 FOX News's coverage of the Seattle protests has been fake news at best. Their article of armed gunmen in the Autonomous Zone had Photoshopped images, as exposed in a CNN Business expose [25]. While it is photos, the photoshopped headline was significant enough to be outed in another media outlet, and therefore should be taken into consideration for being fully deprecated. BrythonLexi (talk) 13:16, 14 June 2020 (UTC) BrythonLexi (talkcontribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.
  • Option 3: Per Aquillion, Snooganssnoogans, and Guy and others. The is media bias and then the is fake news and clearly unreliable for factual reporting such as the seattle protests, covid-19 and the riduclous reporting that turned the Birmingham, the UKs second largest city into muslim controlled no-go area . The news service needs to clean up its act if we are going to treat with confidence as a reliable source. ~ BOD ~ TALK 16:01, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 5: If inclusion in WP hinges on whether reporting by a single NEWSORG is reliable then you've already failed. Remove and replace where acadmeic sources are more appropriate, cede AP2 to the POV pushers—readers can't trust that content anyway—and wait until editors start listening to Masem. fiveby(zero) 17:02, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 for news, Option 2/3 for commentary depending on which pundit is involved. The weight/focus given to certain topics is perhaps not agreeable; but looking at articles individually, nothing suggests a lack of editorial control which would jeopardize editorial control, as Masem points out. When readers look at citations to Fox News articles, they are looking at individual news articles, not the network/website as a whole. feminist | freedom isn't free 02:30, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 for news and politics, Option 3 for science-related matters. Ten years ago, I would have selected Option 3 for the entire news organization, but the last decade has witnessed a slow but steady decline in reporting standards across the Western world, so in that sense, Fox is no longer any better or worse than other major networks such as CNN or MSNBC in terms of reliability and impartiality. That being said, I don't think Fox should generally be considered a WP:RS when it comes to science-related matters, given that it has consistently provided a platform to climate change deniers and often runs stories suggesting that climate change is not caused by human activity. Amanuensis Balkanicus (talk) 05:13, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 for news and politics. They were the only major media to cover the Tara Reid situation while the others tried to bury it. Fox has a clear conservative bias, but as mentioned above, there is no such thing as bias-free political reporting. It needs to be handled on a case-by-case basis.Jacona (talk) 15:50, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
Odd, as we do not even use Fox news in her bio, so what is this "situation" that is so important we do not mention in?Slatersteven (talk) 16:02, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
Their Tara Reade reporting is actually a reason to NOT use Fox News. They immediately jumped on the situation (a BLP and NOTNEWS violation here), without getting more clarity on the subject, because they will immediately grab and exaggerate anything that smears Biden and helps Trump. That's their reflex and job, to smear, not report news accurately. That's why they were the first to write much about it.
Other RS were more circumspect and cautious, waiting for more clarity and evidence. Fox News was acting like the National Enquirer, and lots of what they originally wrote is now seen to be outdated and wrong. Of all sources, Fox News and the National Enquirer are the types we should wait a long time with before using. Fox News should be deprecated, just like the Enquirer.
In fact, try comparing how Fox News ignored and downplayed Trump's boasting/confession of his habit and methodology of non-consensually sexually assaulting women, and their ignoring and downplaying of all the credible allegations by numerous women who experienced that and did not want it, and then compare their reporting on Tara Reade. That comparison shows they are not "news" but "propaganda". -- Valjean (talk) 16:17, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
Valjean It's concerning that you are printing untruths here, and have refused to strike or support your comments regarding Fox's Reade reporting (below). Fox was not the only media to report on the Reade allegation early on, they were joined by New York Mag, The Intercept, Vox, The Economist, Newsweek, The Guardian, and other outlets. petrarchan47คุ 03:57, 7 July 2020 (UTC)
Ohh, Tara Reade Mmmmmm, the story that was being " not ignored" as early as 2019 by "not Fox news".Slatersteven (talk) 16:24, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
Valjean, what Tara Reade reporting from Fox is now seen to be outdated and wrong? petrarchan47คุ 22:41, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
Valjean Sorry, Valjean, when you have a chance could you please enlighten us regarding the alleged shoddy reporting from Fox. Given the focus of this RfC, your statement and support for it are highly relevant and will significantly effect my !Vote. Thanks, petrarchan47คุ 19:20, 19 June 2020 (UTC)
Petrarchan47 so sorry for this late reply. I get a lot of notifications and yours dropped through the cracks, so to speak, so thanks for the ping. My concern was with their biased coverage of the story as it developed, which is part of their pattern, a feature, not a bug. They were pretty breathless in their support of Reade in the beginning, and unlike mainstream sources, they did not properly cover all the compromising information that later surfaced which destroyed her credibility. That had to come from mainstream media which looks at all sides of a story. This type of extremely biased coverage from Fox News makes sense, as they are Trump's main propaganda station (but OANN is taking over that role) and thus will also push anything which tarnishes Biden, but not do the same with anything that tarnishes Trump.
Their bias is no longer just the type of ordinary bias which most news sources have, but, since their slide to the extreme right-wing in the last eight years (their strong racist reaction to Obama seemed to trigger it), it affects their reliability. The bias of a news source is not a reason to oppose its use, but extreme bias does affect accuracy, and that is of concern. They have become quite extreme, and their web and TV versions are now rated as slightly more and slightly less reliable than Breitbart, which is above InfoWars, but that's still pretty bad. They have slid down from the previous version of the most accurate media bias chart available. -- Valjean (talk) 23:48, 19 June 2020 (UTC)
I was hoping for actual sources to support your claim that Foxs reporting is "now seen to be outdated and wrong". Wrong? Citation needed. Oudated? You'll need a source for that too. Opinions carry no weight. Some people have assumed that if she lied elsewhere, and if her ex-landlords don't like her, she and all the corroboration somehow vanish. If she lied to get into law school, then she wasn't assaulted in '93? I've seen no RS assert this. You have claimed Fox engaged in innacurate reporting in the Reade case. This is a serious claim made in a formal request for comment, I request that if you can't show an example of false Reade reporting, please strike your comment (given the venue). I also disagree with your assessment of their coverage, and note you've provided no examples. Many of your claims require a comparison to make sense. I would invite you to compare CNN's coverage of Kavanaugh with Foxs Reade coverage (that's breathless). I would also invite you to compare Fox with NYT. Both sides are partisan and report in ways that serve their interests. Banning or downgrading only one side violates WP:NPOV. petrarchan47คุ 02:20, 20 June 2020 (UTC)
  • I agree with every word from Peter Gulutzan in his Defective question section below. I don't believe the instructions at the top of this page ("Please be sure to include examples of editing disputes that show why you are seeking comment on the source") were adequately addressed (00:25, 3 July 2020).
  • DGG is right: Readers expect to see information from all sides of an issue at Wikipedia, and if we do not use the best available sources on all sides we are rejecting NPOV, in favor of advocacy DGG (07:27, 23 June 2020)
  • S Philbrook is spot on: a handful of errors do not remotely qualify as failing a "reputation for accuracy and fact checking". If that was all it took, we wouldn't have any sources qualifying as RS. S Philbrick (15:12, 6 July 2020)
  • Springee makes many good points, especially: Externally calling Fox unreliable will be clearly viewed by some as a partisan action and a case where the wolves outnumbered the sheep while voting on what's for dinner. That will not be good for Wikipedia. If we can't say how treating Fox as reliable has hurt Wikipedia then it seems clear this is more about silencing those who we dislike vs anything else. Springee (14:52, 6 July 2020)
Downgrading Fox News would mean that some topics and stories would not be covered at all by the encyclopedia. Masem asks does Fox provide any unique content that cannot be sourced from other RSes (18:18, 20 June 2020)
Yes. Then and now: How evidence in Kavanaugh case compares with Biden accusation Fox is not the only source to compare the allegations against Judge Kavanaugh and Joe Biden, but all the other sources that do have been disallowed by Wikipedia. Left-of-Fox sources have not looked at all the facts side by side. As a result, everyone believes the exact opposite of the truth, which is that Biden's accuser, Tara Reade, has much more corroborating evidence** than Christine Blasey Ford, who actually has negative corroboration (all the people she said were at the party have denied her claims.****). The two cases are treated very differently by Wikipedia. Downgrading Fox would not help. Larry Sanger has called us out for abandoning NPOV, and suggests Wikipedians "admit that their notion of what is credible does, in fact, bias them against conservatism..." 19:41, 16 June 2020 petrarchan47คุ 07:00, 7 July 2020 (UTC)
That's exactly what I have concluded about the NYT, and I have proof. Many editors have mentioned that really there are no corporate media outlets that aren't partisan nowadays. Should we downgrade them all? Won't eradicating all sources from one side of the equation result in a horribly biased encyclopedia? petrarchan47คุ 19:25, 19 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3: In 2015, President Reagan's former domestic policy advisor, Bruce Bartlett, published his detailed analysis of Fox News wherein Bartlett concludes Fox News is a "Propaganda Machine." [55]. In his analysis, Barlett reports on several studies that found "Fox viewers are misinformed" and are "more likely to have factually untrue beliefs than those who receive their news from mainstream sources." In my view, even if you look only at their alleged 'news shows," Fox is a propaganda outlet. For example, on their alleged 'news shows:'
  • Just last week Fox News finally removed their "digitally altered video" of their coverage of the protests in Seattle after they admitted the cities in their video were not of Seattle at all. [56] [57] [58]. Fox News' "deceitful tactic was called out by The Seattle Times. The local newspaper reported that when it asked Fox News about the images, the network removed them. Fox News' depiction of the demonstration mirrors much of right-wing media's attempt to portray it as menacing." [59]
  • On Fox News Special Report w/Bret Baier: Bret Baier displayed a racist graphic alleging that the Stock Market gets a big boost when black men are murdered or beaten to near death. After criticism, Bret Baier actually had the racist-nerve to justify producing his racist graphic but did apologize for airing his racist graphic “It was used to illustrate market reactions to historic periods of civil unrest and should have never aired." [60] [61]
  • Fox News' Martha MacCallum: On the rapidly spreading, deadly coronavirus, Martha MacCallum told her Fox viewers that re-opening the U.S. economy is more important than mitigating the spread of coronavirus, [62]  Recently Marth MacCallum told her viewers that the May job's report is vindication for all of Trump supporters who protested with their assault weapons against state's that shut-down to mitigate the spread of coronavirus. [63] In mid-May, Martha MacCallum cut away from coronavirus coverage to pushTrump's Obamagate conspiracy onto her Fox viewers. 
  • Fox News' Bill Hemmer: On the 2018 midterms, to his Fox viewers, Bill Hemmer equated Democrat voters to Saddam Hussein supporters when Hemmer compared Democratic voter turnout in the midterm elections to “Saddam Hussein numbers.” [64] In a March 25, 2020 interview, Bill Hemmer did not challenge Trump and did not correct Trump's lies for Fox viewers when Trump as on Hemmer's show lying and misrepresenting facts about the coronavirus. [65].
    ***
  • Fox News' Ed Henry: When the public learned of the whistleblower report against Trump, Ed Henry told his Fox viewers that the whistleblower was acting with “political bias” against Trump. [66] Ed Henry recently told his Fox viewers that other media were spreading lies about Trump tear-gassing peaceful protesters in DC for a photo-op. Ed Henry said, “We should also point out though that some of the reporting from a couple nights ago was false, which is that there was all of this talk that really spun this up into a controversy, that pepper spray and whatnot was used,” [67]
  • Fox News' Shannon Bream pushed anti-Transgender propaganda to her Fox viewers and did not challenge two of her guests when they  "made false and dangerous claims that protections for transgender people put other Americans at risk." [68] Other times, Shannon Bream 'misgenders' and stigmatizes transgender athletes to her Fox viewers and described JayCee Cooper as a  “biological male, now identifying as female”  and described NCAA track & field runner CeeCee Telfer as “a biological male who now identifies as a woman.”  
  • Fox News' Sandra Smith:  During Sandra Smith's interview of K.T. McFarland, McFarland equated Rep. Adam Schiff to Hitler's propagandist, Joseph Goebbles.  Instead of telling her Fox viewers to ignore McFarland for equating a Jewish man to Hitler's propagandist, Sandra Smith simply said, "K.T McFarland, great to have you on this morning, thanks so much." [69] Sandra Smith lied to her Fox viewers and falsely claimed that Trump wants key witnesses like Mick Mulvaney and John Bolton to testify in the Impeachment hearings even though Trump blocked them and all witnesses from testifying during the entire impeachment process. [70]
Based off these examples, and more that I did not put here, Option 3 is my choice BetsyRMadison (talk) 17:59, 17 June 2020 (UTC)
Your list of critical opinions above that you used as the reason to demote a generally RS needs to be cited to generally reliable sources or better, not biased opinions published in questionable or biased sources like HuffPo, Mediaite, Glaad, Daily Caller, Media Matters, and a few competitor sources. Also, the criticism and commentary you added about the photo illlustration and photoshopped images is noncompliant with WP:RECENTISM and WP:BREAKING, especially considering the images were retracted by Fox which is a sign of credibility. The same applies to the graph that was used without context - apologies were made by two Fox news anchors including Bret Baier. Atsme Talk 📧 01:02, 18 June 2020 (UTC)
More examples here. François Robere (talk) 10:04, 22 June 2020 (UTC)
These are primarily examples of Fox having incorrect opinions rather than incorrect facts. Having an opinion that it's more important to open the economy than it is to contain the coronavirus doesn't make a source unreliable. Neither is comparing your political opponents to Saddam Hussein or Nazis. Chess (talk) (please use {{ping|Chess}} on reply) 06:07, 24 June 2020 (UTC)
No, they're not? I explicitly addressed conspiracy theories,[26][27][28][29][30][31][32] false equivalences on scientific consensus,[33][34][35][36][37][38] misleading graphics,[39][40] and ethical problems[34][41] affecting their news dept, and much of it is backed not by "primary examples", but by expert opinions, analyses and even studies. François Robere (talk) 10:59, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
Recommended reading WP:ASSERT. Erik Wemple which you cited more than once is a media critic for WaPo which is not unlike an opinion editor. As for the scholarly links, they are better sources but they don't magically turn opinions into facts. The author of the research paper you cited, Patrick C. Meirick, is an associate professor, not tenured, and his citations are not impressive. Scholars have biases, too. For example, this article speaks to a study titled The Social and Political Views of American Professors which surveyed 1,417 full-time faculty members. Read the key findings. dding multiple links to sources doesn't magically turn opinions into fact or tell us their view is the correct one, and all others are wrong. That is not our job as editors, and is certainly not NPOV. We still have to consider all relevant views per WP:BALANCE. The obvious result of this RfC is that we should practice closer compliance with WP:RECENTISM and WP:NOTNEWS as it relates to ALL news sources, especially those that are biased, use anonymous sources that cannot be corroborated, and journalistic opinion to spin a story using clickbait sensationalism and misleading headlines. Atsme Talk 📧 17:20, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
Erik Wemple which you cited more than once Yes, he's one out of the fifteen sources that I cited above. I assume you've no objections to the others?
a media critic for WaPo which is not unlike an opinion editor And..? There's nothing inherently wrong about being an analyst versus a reporter. The only reason you'd think he's less he's less of a journalist is because you're so used to what Fox does, that you forgot that others do it differently.[71] PS - Wemple has two degrees in governance, speaks four languages and writes for a paper of record that won 69 Pulitzers, so presumably he's a tad better than Tucker Carlson.[72]
As for the scholarly links, they are better sources but they don't magically turn opinions into facts. The author... is an associate professor, not tenured, and his citations are not impressive Glass houses etc. Do you have any relevant sources of your own? Some random study on American academics that doesn't even mention Fox is hardly pertinent here. François Robere (talk) 21:32, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Options 2, 3 and 4. At the very least Fox News news needs to be marked as a biased source and all content needs to be carefully considered through this lens, so option 2 should apply across the board. They should be regarded as deprecated for US political content (fairly broadly interpeted) including climate change, race relations in the United States and gun control in the United States, except for WP:ABOUTSELF references. Option 3 should apply for content that is peripherally or indirectly related to US politics, including UK politics. Thryduulf (talk) 18:15, 17 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 Fox News is about as reliable as the New York Times or CNN. It is important to distinguish their talk shows and general reporting. The general reporting is much more reliable than the opinion pieces and the talk shows. The talk shows and opinion pieces are about as reliable as the New York Times opinion pieces. Scorpions13256 (talk) 18:57, 17 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 4. As the history of Fox News as an organization demonstrates, it was invented, designed, developed, and produced with the sole purpose of undermining the practice of journalism due to its fundamental belief that reality has a liberal bias. You can read this for yourself in any number of historical works about the organization. The idea for Fox News came out of the conservative right-wing’s disgust with how Nixon was treated by the press. Vowing that they would never allow facts and evidence to interfere with reality ever again, Fox was created as a parallel world, where conservative facts replaced “liberal” ones, mostly by engaging in open distortion, fabrication, and wholesale lying. The fact that they sometimes regurgitate Associated Press stories does not save them from their fate or wipe the slate clean. Fox is not a news organization. It has never been fair and balanced. It has never been the slightest bit interested in reporting and letting the audience decide. It is a giant lie, and has operated as a liar, from the day it opened its doors. It exists solely to undermine truth, to impede the rule of law based on the body of observable facts, data, and evidence, and to constrain the democratic impulse of informing the electorate for which journalism as a practice and a discipline takes its role as a function of a responsible citizen. There is no other option than option 4. Viriditas (talk) 22:31, 17 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 4, or failing that Option 3. At best, Fox is a highly partisan source which misrepresents through distortion and selectivity. At worst, it publishes outright falsehoods. The problem here is not that Fox is right-leaning, but that is a purveyor of bad journalism. --BrownHairedGirl (talk) • (contribs) 23:00, 17 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2 for straight "sky is blue" reporting, Option 3 for most pundits, Option 4 for certain folks including but not limited to Laura Ingraham and Sean Hannity. In other words, it's a case by case basis. We can't apply a one-size fits all. Heck, for straight sports reporting without editorial commentary (their horse racing is decent), they are almost to Option 1 (much as I really hate to admit it). And I say all of the above as a known US liberal Democrat. JMO. But the thing I'm seeing here is a lot of people starting to personalize this discussion, and that's inappropriate Montanabw(talk) 16:44, 18 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 or Option 2 - the television news offered by Fox and similar outlets is not reliable for anything but opinion. However Fox News stories online should generally be expected to be reliable for fact, understanding that Fox in general has a pro-Republican bias. This RfC is a great example of Perennial Sources List mission creep: no longer providing commentary or guidance on wholly unreliable sources, and instead serving as an excuse to deprecate news sources with undesirable political opinion. This leads me to think we need to look hard at the perennial sources list and what exactly it’s being used for. -Darouet (talk) 03:00, 19 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2, generally - Their reporting is mostly factual (apart from their punditry), but especially when it comes to international affairs, it is sloppy on the details, and therefore not completely reliable. See this article for an example. TucanHolmes (talk) 14:18, 19 June 2020 (UTC)
  • I'd say Option 2 - Fox News is a conservative news channel. According to NewsGuard (the browser extension), Fox News struggles in "gather[ing] and present[ing] information responsibly" and "handl[ing] the difference between news and opinion responsibly"[42]. So yes, Fox News is generally reliable, but it is important to read the article first for bias before using it. They are not wrong - they just sometimes are misleading. Of course, we have slip-ups every now and then, so we should still be careful when drawing news from just one source and content forks. Aasim 20:46, 19 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2 I would really like to see this rating changed. A source can put a lot of bias into an article simply by the choice of wording. For example, in one article Fox said a politician was having an "extramarital affair" when in truth he had been estranged and not lived with his wife for over ten years. Or perhaps here: [73] where they report on a new Montana oil pipeline and out of the blue they throw in the fact that in a neighboring state the government spent $38 million policing protests over that pipeline (Dakota Access). Fox does this sort of manipulation in environmental articles and they do it in their political articles as well. And BTW, I'm not going to argue with any editor that insists that other outlets are biased as well. I have found Fox to be much worse. Gandydancer (talk) 03:27, 20 June 2020 (UTC)
I think it would have been helpful to have mentioned that these two examples are only from my previous week of work here, not because they are the most egregious ones I have seen. I also should have noted that the political example was about two Democrats, one black and the other black/Indian. The Montana pipeline is from a search of a few days ago as I was attempting to update the Dakota Access Pipeline and related articles. Gandydancer (talk) 18:22, 20 June 2020 (UTC) I have been closely following this discussion and carefully comparing FOX news articles to the other outlets and it's much worse than I thought. For example, today Trump passed his 200th judge and the major news outlets covered it with some also mentioning none of them have been black but FOX did not even publish a news article but rather published an opinion article titled "Trump's 200th judge confirmed -- federal judiciary has been transformed, promises kept by this guy [74] in which he discussed the horrors we face if Trump is not reelected. True it's an opinion piece, but this is a clear demonstration of extreme bias in reporting. I'm changing my decision to Option 3.
  • Mixed, depends on a whole lot of things.
    The TV news doesn't usually lie and on matters that aren't of interest to US conservatives, I'd generally believe what it says. On matters of interest to US conservatives such as climate change or gun control, it still doesn't lie, but it has problems with agenda setting and it misleads by omission. Like all the US news media I've ever seen, its foreign coverage is dismal, but I don't think that's bias; US journalists rarely understand the rest of the world.
    The website is significantly less reliable than the news. Again this is not usually untruth so much as topic choice, omission and framing, but unlike the TV news, editors on this page have been able to cite clear examples of faked photos on the website.
    The pundits and talking heads are a disgrace. They should never be used as sources for anything other than Fox News' opinion.—S Marshall T/C 15:43, 20 June 2020 (UTC)
I would take it a step further... I don’t think the views of the pundits and other talking heads should be used for anything other than for their own opinions. Sean Hannity’s views are different from Tucker Carlsons, which are both different from Greg Gutfeld’s. So we can not say which represents the views of “Fox News”. We should attribute to Hannity, Carlson, or Gutfeld. Blueboar (talk) 16:23, 20 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Fox News decides who its pundits are, so Fox News needs to accept responsibility for what they say. I feel that it's right to blame the speaker and absolve the platform if, and only if, the platform doesn't choose the speaker.—S Marshall T/C 17:01, 20 June 2020 (UTC)
  • But WHICH speaker represents the views of the platform? The various pundits and talking heads often hold wildly different (and sometimes diametrically opposing) views. Blueboar (talk) 18:49, 20 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 4, a view mandated by consideration of a high-quality academic study: Benkler Y, Faris R and Roberts H (2018) Network Propaganda: Manipulation, Disinformation, and Radicalization in American Politics. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. Sustained deliberate distortion is the Fox business model. Nomoskedasticity (talk) 18:52, 20 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 Much of the opinion-related stuff is absolutely gross, but this is only discussing the news-collecting portion, not commentary. We can judge whether something is straight-up reporting or incendiary blathering just like we do with any other source. CoffeeCrumbs (talk) 01:22, 21 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3. The previous arguments for Option 3 are cogent and persuasive, noting especially the climate denial nonsense, the assessments by Politifact and Media Bias Fact Check, the emotionally loaded headlines, their propensity for commentary from biased pundits, their recent coronavirus misinformation, and all the other Fox News controversies. Binksternet (talk) 01:59, 21 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 or 2 It is true that it's a conservative news agency, but we cannot deny the fact that it has several reporters and is a well-established organization that can be trusted when it comes to straight coverage of the news and events. If we were to rule it out because it's too conservative, then CNN's credibility can also be questioned because it might be considered too liberal. I wouldn't necessarily trust other info presented by Fox though, such as their talk shows or political analysis programs but that's separate from news reporting. Keivan.fTalk 03:04, 21 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 Fox certainly has its partisan leaning, but the same can be said of other major news agencies. The media in general has shown a lack of impartiality since 2016, taking one side or the other instead of remaining neutral. If anything, the conservative bias of Fox is a counterweight to the majority of the media, which is left-leaning. Much of the "disinformation" cited above is about current, controversial topics in which there's a notable dissenting minority opinion. Strong disagreement with their views does not disqualify them as RS. Xcalibur (talk) 07:02, 21 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 No 100% unbiased human being has ever lived on this planet. The grounds on which the credibility of this outlet has been criticized could also be applied on others. MS 会話 07:39, 21 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 Yeah, sure, op-eds about american politics and the partisan lean of the network are to be taken with a grain of salt, with the considerations of WP:BIASEDSOURCES when appropriate, but Fox is still far from the level of shittiness at Breitbart or the like, and this doesn't seem to affect factual reporting that much. RandomCanadian (talk / contribs) 14:30, 21 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 4. That doesn't mean that Fox is unreliable for everything, but only that it's hard to know when they're reliable unless it's corroborated by a better source, and in that case we should be using the better source rather than Fox. NightHeron (talk) 15:15, 21 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 is correct here. We need to make a distinction between opinion and fact; and most of the responses here that are anti-Fox News are trying to classify it as unreliable because they have the wrong opinions, not because of a belief that Fox News reports incorrect facts. Emotionally loaded headlines and biased pundits don't make a source unreliable. Neither does sometimes having the facts wrong about the coronavirus pandemic, a rapidly developing situation. CNN reported that "Masks can't stop the coronavirus in the US, but hysteria has led to bulk-buying, price-gouging and serious fear for the future" [75]. Remember when Chris Cuomo explicitly said that it's illegal to possess the DNC emails leaked by wikileaks? [76] Or when CNN promoted strange rumours about Melania Trump's whereabouts? [77] Here's a recent article where CNN promotes unsubstantiated rumours about Donald Trump's health. [78] Let's not forget that they falsely declared Kim Jong-Un dead. Heck we have a whole article about CNN controversies, but nobody is trying to deprecate it. The vast majority of the people voting (because we all know this is a vote no matter how much we try to pretend it's not) here are complaining because Fox News doesn't share their opinions on contentious matters. This proposal is pretty clear evidence of Wikipedia's strong left-wing bias and deprecating Fox News while allowing left-wing media sources like CNN or MSNBC will further entrench this bias in articles. And no, this isn't a false equivalency. CNN's and MSNBC's news coverage is incredibly biased much like Fox News. The fact they claim not to be biased while Fox News doesn't (as much) is meaningless. If this proposal does go through (and it's pretty obvious it'll end up as Option 2 as the closing admins will interpret a lack of consensus as that instead of doing the proper thing and keeping the previous consensus) I'll likely start another for CNN despite it being obvious what the outcome of that will be. Chess (talk) (please use {{ping|Chess}} on reply) 03:25, 22 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3: I don't have a lot of patience with a news source that constantly spreads propaganda for (at least it looks suspiciously like) whoever pays them the most. Case in point they've been caught fabricating photos of the BLM protests to make them seem more violent and dangerous just a few weeks ago. If it's anything even remotely politics related, I wouldn't trust them as far as I can kick them --Licks-rocks (talk) 09:12, 22 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3: Just recently they fabricated pictures from BLM protests to suggest violence and vandalism,[79] which joins on dozens of other incidents of them publishing misleading or downright false information. It's true that they also have some strictly factual reporting, but you can't disentwine that from the rest of the site (or the network, for that matter); the meaning of "generally reliable" is "generally trustworthy". If you have to sift to find the parts that you can trust, then it's not "generally reliable". François Robere (talk) 09:57, 22 June 2020 (UTC)
    • Just to stress with regards to reasoning that this isn't just "someone's opinion" - it's the consensus among experts and scholars in the fields of mass media and political science. I've collected +80 sources on this (including a whole bunch of scholarly ones), and I can't name a single one that vindicates Fox News on factuality. At best they're seen as something that used to be a legitimate - if partisan - news organization; at worst, they're viewed as an imminent danger to the American democracy. What's more, experts explicitly debunk the false equivalence between eg. MSNBC and FN, which is seen as being in a category all of its own. Recognizing that we're a fact-based enterprise means that we cannot go against RS and accept FN as factual, when no one else will. François Robere (talk) 16:19, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 4 > 3 > 2 > 1: I think it's reasonably clear that Fox News is not as reliable as other major news networks. Besides all the strong arguments given before, I would vote against considering Fox reliable based on the shenanigans they do with graphs alone. I mean, look at this! That didn't even air on a pundit show, that aired on Fox Business! Loki (talk) 19:36, 22 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Originally had 3 ahead of 4; however, the CHAZ photo manipulation below has convinced me that Fox does not merely present technically true information in a misleading manner; it at least some of the time actively falsifies information. Loki (talk) 04:24, 1 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Hasn't this^ editor been topic-banned from post-1932 American politics (broadly construed)? I'd also like to add that this is the editor who most forcefully sought to include deranged Fox News "news reporting" on the Murder of Seth Rich page. If o.ther editors hadn't disputed the reliability of Fox News, the Wikipedia page for Murder of Seth Rich would have promoted deranged conspiracy theories. Snooganssnoogans (talk) 16:57, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
Anyone closing this RFC should feel free to disregard my !vote if they think it's political. My whole point is that Fox News is not political. (Incidentally, I was not banned from post-1932 politics because of anything related to Seth Rich. I was banned from post-1932 politics because of a hysterical response to an accurate comment at my user talk page that I kindly deleted before the ban was imposed. It will probably be a lifetime ban, because I have no interest in futilely grovelling for forgiveness to ArbCom for not doing anything wrong. Nor any desire to be slandered by the usual crowd of lying vipers who censor content at Wikipedia by getting rid of content-creators. Sincerely,) Anythingyouwant (talk) 02:21, 28 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 to 4 per Valjean, and per all the people !voting option 1 we may as well depreciate all other sources while we're at it. I'll go start the other RfCs, shall I? Alpha3031 (tc) 04:35, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2 with Option 3 being a close second choice. There is substantial evidence that Fox News often bends the truth to fit their pervasive bias, but to be fair, so does CNN, although to a lesser extent. This seems to be a growing problem that mirrors (or causes) polarization within U.S. society. I think both of these sources (and many others) are best avoided if we want to write good encyclopedic content from a neutral perspective. WP:RSP should reflect that Fox News is a sketchy source that should be avoided in favor of better sources, but it should not be deprecated. - MrX 🖋 11:55, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Defective question It's missing the most plausible answer which is that all of the 4 listed options are invalid over-generalizations.North8000 (talk) 13:38, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1,2,3,4 depending on the Fox source in question and the topic area. Generally speaking. -- GreenC 14:01, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2 For general, non-pundit reporting. Option 1 for local affiliate stations. Option 3/4 for most opinion/taking head content. KidAd (talk) 21:30, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 For news reports, they are a reliable source. Facts are true and fact checked. Not liking the facts, tone, or emphasis doesn't make them unreliable or less reliable. They are as reliable for facts as other main sources of news items such as other top-tier broadcast, print or online sources. ConstantPlancks (talk) 22:24, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3 for news reports touching on politics or science, Option 1 for news reports on other subjects, and Option 4 for commentators. The areas where Fox News is shown to avoid fact-checking, alter photos, or print outright lies are all in the areas of politics or science. I haven't seen anyone show that other areas (e.g. celebrity news, sports, etc) are really affected (but this thread is very, very long and I need to go teach Japanese toddlers the word "no" for several hours). Sean Hannity has advocated QAnon claims (ironic given his views on the Roy Moore sexual misconduct allegations) and said Covid-19 was a "hoax" possibly perpetrated by the "deep state", while Tucker Carlson and Laura Ingraham have borrowed rhetoric from the White genocide conspiracy theory -- were they users, they would long since been blocked. Ian.thomson (talk) 22:47, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 - Anything other than Option 1 would then have to also be applied to CNN, NBC, and other mainstream news outlets who peddled (and as far as I'm aware have not corrected) the debunked Trump/Russia collusion conspiracy theory for years on end, despite evidence to the contrary. Yodabyte (talk) 04:37, 26 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 for Foxnews.com prior to 2016–2017. I used their web pieces a lot in articles on political topics – they were geneerally solid and many of their pieces were based on Associated Press filings. Option 3 for Foxnews.com since 2016–2017. It's gotten visibly slanted and sensationalistic. This Politico piece from December 2017 describes the transition Foxnews.com underwent in 2016–2017, which explains the difference. Wasted Time R (talk) 10:41, 26 June 2020 (UTC)
    • In the case of re-reporting, I always prefer to cite the original source, especially since AP is more reliable than FN and the articles are available free to read at the AP website. https://apnews.com/ buidhe 11:21, 26 June 2020 (UTC)
      • @Buidhe: At the time that I used Foxnews.com a lot (mid-late 2000s, early 2010s) the AP stories were often not available directly or would disappear in a couple weeks' time. Back then Foxnews.com had the advantages of not being behind a paywall and having stable URLs for their stories. What I'm really saying is that I wouldn't want to see a Daily Mail kind of verdict here. There are plenty of solid Foxnews.com cites from that era in WP articles and there is no reason to have a blanket removal of them, and the material they are supporting, from WP. Wasted Time R (talk) 12:37, 26 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 per Thucydides411 and ConstantPlancks. Their clear bias (coverage, tone, etc.) has no bearing on their reliability. - DoubleCross () 14:22, 26 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 per Ad Orientem and Thucydides411. Jauerbackdude?/dude. 19:56, 26 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3 per above. Shoddy fact checking, long track record of being generally unreliable. -FASTILY 22:39, 26 June 2020 (UTC)
  • A distinction must be made between Fox News (news) and Fox News (opinion). I'd say option 1/2 for the news part, and option 3 for the opinion. Concurring with Atsme's comment above which puts it better: we would not downgrade other news networks for having biased 'pundit' reporting on their talk shows. Many responses have not considered the distinction between the two. ProcrastinatingReader (talk) 23:14, 26 June 2020 (UTC)
    • @ProcrastinatingReader: keep in mind that "bias" itself is not the reason there is opposition to Fox News. All major networks have some form of bias. No, it's their accuracy that is the problem, IOW their "reliability" per this noticeboard. Their accuracy used to be better, when they had an ordinary slightly right-wing bias and before they deviated from their purely GOP talking points network mission (the reason Roger Ailes created Fox News), and became a vehicle for extreme-right wing views.
Extreme bias, be it right-wing or left-wing, always sacrifices accuracy and reliability. CNN, MSNBC, etc. may have bias, but they still stay close to what is factual. That's because their bias isn't as extreme as that of Fox News. CNN is considered by Europeans to have a slightly right-wing bias and MSNBC to have a slightly left-wing bias, which shows that it is Fox News that has slid very far to the right. See Overton window. Fox News has slid so far to the right that their extreme bias makes them unreliable. How else could they be in league with/accepted by Trump? It can't be any other way. No centrist source would ever be able to support him, and they don't. Only extreme right-wing sources do that. -- Valjean (talk) 21:26, 27 June 2020 (UTC)
Valjean, sure, I use 'bias' in that context to mean 'false, exaggerated, unreliable sensationalist reporting'. This is (mostly/entirely?) limited to their pundits and talk shows, though. Many CNN opinion pieces aren't factual at all. Their reporting for the news is good. Their news reporting is probably far better than Fox's, anyway. But this RfC seems to conflate news with talk shows / opinion articles. They're not the same for Fox, and they're not the same for any network. ProcrastinatingReader (talk) 21:33, 27 June 2020 (UTC)
  1. Luckily, since every single claim in that 60 page report is sourced, you can check it yourself. Have you found any fallacies?
  2. Have you any sources of your own to back that attack against the Guardian?
  3. Actually, he addresses bias in the news department more than once, as well as in Fox as a whole: "Ed Henry’s role in the news division is chief national correspondent, but in the opinion division he’s a co-host of the weekend edition of Fox & Friends... while guest-hosting Fox & Friends, Henry discussed how “important” it was that his reporting on Hannity was helping Trump distract people from the impeachment inquiry"; "Henry’s fellow correspondent Griff Jenkins also sometimes co-hosts Fox & Friends, where he gets to divulge exclusive reporting like his allegation that ethnic studies classes aren’t educational"; "legitimate journalist and former chief news anchor Shepard Smith: after he had a dramatic on-air feud with the opinion kingpin Tucker Carlson, both Fox News’ CEO and its president reportedly threatened to take Smith off the air if he criticized Carlson again... A few weeks later, Smith resigned"; "[pastor and Fox contributor Robert Jeffress's] unhinged comment highlighted a debate you may have heard of about so-called “post-birth” abortion, a procedure disproved by its very name. If the abortion happens after a child is born, then it’s not abortion; it’s murder, which is already very illegal everywhere"; "in October 2018, Fox News became a wailing siren on immigration, claiming that the US was under “invasion” by undocumented immigrants... [running] nearly eight hours of content [in one week] on the then distant caravan"; "a Fox News executive reportedly told Vanity Fair that the network’s “power comes from” its viewers, and it must defend them"; "It shows how news and opinion is blurred – but opinion wins – and the lengths the network goes to ensure a devoted audience. Fox is a shameless counterfeit of a news organization". François Robere (talk) 11:45, 29 June 2020 (UTC)
I am not going to discuss whether Media Matters for America is reliable as there absolutely no consensus that it is. I never claimed The Guardian was not an RS just that it has a liberal/left leaning bias [87] so naturally it is going to paint Fox News (conservative) in the worst way it can. Most of the examples you show here are of talks shows like Fox & Friends not the actual news casting or website. Regards  Spy-cicle💥  Talk? 19:33, 7 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3 and Option 4 for American Politics broadly construed - Yes, there is much that Fox News reports that is factually correct. Those facts are also reported far and wide by other sources that have a higher reliability and less bias. The problem with Fox News for our purposes is that it is used by editors who either cannot or will not also evaluate other sources to determine NPOV WEIGHT. So we get the worst of Fox cited to support partisan conspiracy theories, talking point spin, and speculation as fact notwithstanding the lack of other corroborating sources. Most of what's published on any internet blog is true. Most of what people say in casual conversation is true. Most of what's on Fox News is true. But that is not the standard we apply, and we only invite cherrypicking and tendentious editing in Politics articles by putting every Fox statement up for debate in endless talk page discussions. If it's good content, there will be numerous alternative RS references. Disclosure: I read a lot of Fox's web content and I watch their cable news coverage nearly every day. SPECIFICO talk 14:55, 28 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3 or even Option 4. For god's sake, this isn't just a question of bias. Long, long time ago Fox News was a biased but reliable source. But over the past 6 years or so they've moved over into fake news territory. They've published photo shopped images and pretended they were real [88] [89] [90] (and this isn't the Opinion hosts on Fox, this is Fox News itself). This is long overdue. Volunteer Marek 00:34, 29 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3/4 - Enough is enough is enough. What credence they once may have had has been expended. They won't even admit they purposely faked videos. The website looks like The Onion. O3000 (talk) 00:52, 29 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 - Fox News's REPORTING is just as reliable as CNN's or MSNBC's or any other news network that also hosts opinion based shows on the cable networks. The main complaints about Fox news tend to rest in their opinion based cable tv shows, which have little to do with the ability of Fox news to accuratley report the news in articles and non opinion based shows. Serafart (talk) (contributions) 07:48, 29 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3. If you can't find a better source than Fox News then you have to ask yourself: why not? Is it yet another fabrication? No objection to Option 4 either. Strong objection to Option 1 per all the reports of faked images etc. Daveosaurus (talk) 11:05, 29 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3, from the Seth Rich fabrications to the continuous climate change denial...if something can only be sourced to Fox News and nowhere else, that is pretty telling. ValarianB (talk) 13:32, 29 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3 Fox News operates as a propaganda machine for the Republican Party. It permeates every part of the organization. The supposed division between their "news" and "comment" is a nonsense. None of their output should be considered reliable.-- P-K3 (talk) 15:12, 29 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2, bordering on option 3. I would say that their print articles (website) are slightly better than the on-air reporting. I definitely think local affiliates should be treated separately.  I would say that both the televised and print versions are generally unreliable for U.S. Politics and generally unreliable for science and medicine and should be used with caution in other areas. ~ ONUnicorn(Talk|Contribs)problem solving 18:20, 29 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3: Fox News is huge, so there are many accurate reports of theirs; but that doesn't change the fact that it cannot be relied on for accuracy in general. Fox is too often misleading if not just wrong on purpose, and the management is very effectively using it for propaganda/disinformation. Notrium (talk) 22:28, 29 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 4: Fox News is a propaganda network, plain and simple. Not only is it the least trusted corporate news source, but those who regularly consume Fox News are literally less informed than people who consumed no news at all. Trying to ascertain which tidbits are true and which are bullshit is a waste of time. Really, corporate-run American media outlets in general have a problem to one extent or another, but Fox News is by far the most egregious in terms blatant misreporting and political party affiliations. The claim that Fox News is on the same level as other prominent sources, in itself, is factually inaccurate and seems like drawing a false equivalency to give the appearance of neutrality. Darkknight2149 23:54, 29 June 2020 (UTC)
    Darkknight2149, see this HuffPost article by the researchers who actually did the study. They say that people who claimed the study found "Fox makes you dumb" completely misinterpreted it: "Overall, Fox viewers were not better or worse than the average respondent at answering the questions... We never said, nor meant to say, that Fox viewers are dumb — or MSNBC viewers for that matter. They’re no better or worse than the average respondents. Clearly, anyone who is dumb and watching TV was dumb when he or she sat down in front of the tube. Some news sources just don’t help matters any." JOEBRO64 12:54, 3 July 2020 (UTC)
  • My vote still stands. We're talking about a network that was founded after Republicans repealed the Fairness Doctrine specifically to serve as a function of the Republican party and there are countless examples of this bias impacting their reporting. Even CNN and MSNBC (who have their own problems, such as a corporatist establishment bias and Andrew Cuomo being repeatedly interviewed by his own brother on CNN) don't have that bragging right. Darkknight2149 16:49, 3 July 2020 (UTC)
  • I'd take what Rolling Stone says with a grain of salt. They're already not considered reliable when it comes to politics (they've been called "the house organ of the Democratic National Committee"), and from what I can tell there hasn't been a good discussion here about how their editors let a fabricated rape story and a cover that glamorized Dzhokhar Tsarnaev slide. They're definitely questionable. JOEBRO64 19:49, 3 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Hah. So Rolling Stone is unreliable (because some right-wing pundit called them biased, and because they published and later retracted a false story), but you consider Fox News reliable? I'm not defending Rolling Stone—it's a poor source—I'm just bemused by the hypocrisy and evident double standard on display. Thanks for crystallizing it, at least. MastCell Talk 21:05, 3 July 2020 (UTC)
  • MastCell, I wasn't saying that Rolling Stone is unreliable in general. They're reliable for interviews and mass media topics like music/film. Certain parts of Rolling Stone, like their news/political coverage, are not. That's a lot like my view on Fox: their news reporting is fine, their talk show pundits are not. So no, it's not "hypocrisy"; I'm applying the same standard. I kindly ask you to please refrain from making childlike personal attacks; I only comment here in good faith, so I ask you to assume good faith in return. JOEBRO64 21:21, 3 July 2020 (UTC)
  • OK, so Rolling Stone is unreliable for news/politics because a right-wing pundit said so, and because they published and then retracted a false story. But you find Fox News reliable for news/politics, despite criticism of their bias, and despite the publication (and occasional retraction) of false stories (e.g. Seth Rich conspiracy, Hillary indictment, digitally manipulated fake images, etc) by their news—not opinion—groups. I am assuming good faith: that you simply don't see the double standard at work, not that you are purposely favoring or denigrating sources based on their ideological tilt. MastCell Talk 21:45, 3 July 2020 (UTC)
  • I should probably point out that this information isn't coming from Rolling Stone. I cited them for convenience because they were one of the first sources that came up in a quick Google search. If I'm not mistaken, even the Fox News article goes into detail on this a little bit and it's fairly common knowledge. Fox News was founded specifically as an alternative Republican-centred news network (not even right wing politics in general, but specifically the American Republican party). The founders themselves had ties to the Republican party as well, so it's essentially just a propaganda network with some "sky is blue" reporting baked in. Darkknight2149 03:06, 4 July 2020 (UTC)
  • @TheJoebro64: again you are not accurate (see my previous comment to you), and you use an extremely questionable source like Townhall to denigrate Rolling Stone, a "green" source (generally reliable) at Perennial. That tells us all we need to know about your opinions here. You shouldn't even be reading Townhall. When it comes to American politics, Rolling Stone is far more reliable than Fox News, even on the rare occasions that the news anchors at Fox come up to its level of truth telling, which requires that they go against the agenda of their own network. -- Valjean (talk) 15:03, 5 July 2020 (UTC)
  • @TheJoebro64, Darkknight2149, MastCell, and Valjean: I think you've gone a bit off-topic here. The question isn't whether Rolling Stone is reliable or not, as Fox News's history is well documented regardless (literally whole books have been written about it); the question is whether and how this historical ideological orientation affects its coverage today. I for one agree with the narrative (again documented in numerous sources) that what began as a unofficial Republican enterprise has gone off the rails in the last decade and a half or so, to the point where it operates more as an "outrage reinforcement machine" than a news dissemination organization (which again is backed by multiple sources). François Robere (talk) 12:45, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
  • @TheJoebro64 and Darkknight2149: Let's expand that ellipsis in your quote: "Overall, Fox viewers were not better or worse than the average respondent at answering the questions. That said, and all salient variables being geekily controlled for, there was not merely a zero effect but a negative effect of Fox News on viewers’ ability to answer the questions; meaning that Fox viewers would have done better had they been using almost any other news source, or no news source at all." In other words - "dumb" or not, Fox News is a net negative for its viewers as far knowledge of current affairs goes. François Robere (talk) 17:37, 3 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Options 1/2. Option 1 Per Cactus Jack. Their news reporting is generally adequate. Fairly removed from their talk shows which are Option 4: Tucker Carlson is Option Crank: Usually display a delicate but perceptible spine. When necessary issue corrections. Coverage bias is tangible but no worse than others - all news orgs have this bias. However, Donald Trump coverage - option 2 due to relationship as others noted.DonkeyPunchResin (talk) 22:31, 30 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2, although with elements of 3/4. At this point, other editors have exhaustively sourced their concerns with Fox's tendency toward partisan misinformation. Highlights include the promotion and/or fabrication of partisan conspiracy theories around a murder victim (which were rushed into print on Wikipedia by editors with poor judgment, compounding the victim's family's distress in a hopefully small but real way), Fox's active involvement in promoting climate-change denialism, the promotion of various conspiracy theories about Obama, the false news report—several days before the 2016 election—that Hillary Clinton was about to be indicted, and so on.

    Most recently, Fox News has served as a veritable firehose of misinformation on the Covid-19 pandemic, with measurably harmful consequences: recent scholarly work has documented the unique role that Fox played in spreading harmful misinformation & conspiracy theories about the pandemic, resulting in poorer compliance with safety measures and greater viral spread (summarized here). Since Wikipedia aspires to provide accurate information, relying on Fox News seems ill-advised.

    I would stop short of saying that Fox News is "generally unreliable", but at a minimum, material appearing only on Fox News, without independent verification from sources with better track records, should be treated with extreme caution or excluded. Unfortunately, editors with this sort of good judgment tend to be in short supply on the kinds of articles where Fox News is most likely to broadcast misinformation.

    There's a disconcerting amount of false equivalence on display in this thread. Fox News isn't comparable to CBS, or the Times, or the Post. It's closer to state TV in terms of its close identification with the Republican Party and the Trump Presidency. Other outlets have biases, but none are so closely tied to a specific political personality and partisan affiliation. More specifically, think about Memogate. In response to incorrect reporting, CBS News fired its most prominent on-air personality and hired a Republican politician to conduct an outside review of its practices. Can you imagine Fox News doing anything like that in response to its various falsehoods? Of course not, because Fox News operates under a very different set of parameters than CBS, and comparing the two is just silly.

    Finally, there's a really disappointing, albeit cynically effective, tactic on display here whereby concerns about Fox News are attributed to simple partisanship. The problem is not that Fox News has a conservative bias—the problem is that it frequently allows that bias to manifest in false, misleading, or inaccurate material, and we as a fact- and reality-based project have to treat it with caution as a result. The two arguments in favor of Fox's reliability boil down to whataboutism ("all outlets make mistakes!") and insinuation ("you don't like it because you're lib'rul!") I guess a third argument relies on a distinction between Fox's news and opinion reporting—a distinction that Fox News itself makes every effort to blur. MastCell Talk 22:51, 30 June 2020 (UTC)

  • Option 3. User MastCell sums up my thoughts eloquently, and far better than I could have, although I tend to give them even less benefit of the doubt because of their track record being so spotty at best, so I would say option 3 at best. oknazevad (talk) 02:24, 1 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 2 If Fox is providing non-controversial information that may be unique to it (not available elsewhere) that is fine. If it is echoing what other sources have said but with a conservative tint that is fine. When it comes to highly controversial statements that are factually disputed by other sources, Fox should be attributed. At the least, Fox should be available for attribution. It would be unbalanced to entirely blacklist or deprecate the site - readers need to know what is out there. Common sense applies. If Fox is spouting conspiracy theories that no reliable source is picking up, attribute it, don't censor it. —DIYeditor (talk) 06:42, 1 July 2020 (UTC)
    • Actually such misinformation has so little due weight that we are not supposed to even mention it. We mention it only if RS spend time on the matter, and we cite the RS, not Fox News. When Fox News does mention facts that are covered by other sources, we should use them, not Fox News. -- Valjean (talk) 14:28, 1 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Defective question As North8000 said, but it's worse. The introductory part violates WP:RFCBRIEF and thanks to Atsme we know it was wrong about the last RfC -- '2010' should have been struck. Option 1 is redundant because it's WP:NEWSORG anyway. Option 2 is redundant because it's WP:RSCONTEXT anyway. Option 3 could have been an excusable question if it had been alone and had been about what to do (see WP:DAILYMAIL for an example), but it wasn't. Option 4 is confused because WP:DAILYMAIL didn't say Daily Mail is deprecated (which merely means "not approved"), and "as in the 2017 RfC of the Daily Mail" would mean opinions are allowed as well as older articles. And I don't believe the instructions at the top of this page ("Please be sure to include examples of editing disputes that show why you are seeking comment on the source") were adequately addressed, which unfortunately may have inspired an idea that discussing Fox stories, without showing where in Wikipedia the story was used and disputed, is appropriate. Option 1 = WP:NOTCENSORED but I fear that !voting for it helps legitimize this procedure. I won't reply to heckling. Peter Gulutzan (talk) 00:25, 3 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 per Thucydides411 et al. This is a pretty blatant attempt to insert politics into editing. We shouldn't. --GRuban (talk) 02:29, 3 July 2020 (UTC)
    • Fox was a blatant (and successful) attempt of inserting politics into 24/7 news broadcast.[91] François Robere (talk) 11:07, 3 July 2020 (UTC)
      • That article (as many here are) is talking about Fox talk shows. It starts with Sean Hannity, for example. --GRuban (talk) 01:15, 4 July 2020 (UTC)
        • Actually it discusses Fox News as a network. It's a single network, you know, and everyone there answer to the same people. If Lachlan Murdoch was concerned with journalistic integrity he would've disciplined Hannity long ago, just like NYT's A. G. Sulzberger stepped in after the Tom Cotton op-ed. Can you trust a news organization that exercises so little control over so much of its output? Are you aware of any other organization that does? François Robere (talk) 12:08, 4 July 2020 (UTC)
          • I couldn't agree more. What's more, Saturday Night Live had a totally ridiculous parody of a political figure last night, so we need to blacklist NBC, since they're the same network. A comic strip syndicated in the New York Times made a completely untrue joke, so we need to blacklist the Gray Lady. An opinion columnist in the Washington Post shot her mouth off, so we need to blacklist the Post. Sure, one is a comedy show, one is a comic strip, one is an opinion column, but in each case the publisher or producer in each case didn't demonstrate integrity! THey should have disciplined them! I like that word, disciplined - ideally with spikes and leather. They all answer to the same publisher or producer ... how dare those publishers or producers claim to have any kind of news organizations worthy of any kind of respect! How dare they insist we be able to easily tell the difference between news and opinion? That's asking too much of us readers, like a high school education or something. You get the tar, I've got the feathers right here.   --GRuban (talk) 00:12, 5 July 2020 (UTC)
            • Are you suggesting that Fox News's "talking heads" are as reliable as an explicitly comedic show? If so, then surely FN should be deprecated as a WP:NEWSORG.
              If SNL was aired under the banner of NBC News or MSNBC rather than NBC, and as a news show rather than satire; and if the network had dedicated half its broadcast time to such shows, while blurring the distinction between them and "real" news (eg. by sharing newscasters and segments); and if the news shows themselves were sub-par; then yes, I would agree it should be deprecated as well.
              Also, my DMs are open. François Robere (talk) 11:22, 5 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3Get's my vote. Dutchy45 (talk) 23:39, 4 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3 "Reliable" means "you can rely on it". You need to be pretty gullible to rely on Fox. Unfortunately, there is a lot of gullible people. --Hob Gadling (talk) 08:22, 5 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1, No matter the criticisms that may apply to any other channel, Fox news has provided accurate news and useful talk shows. Alex-h (talk) 09:49, 5 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 4 or Option 3 (second choice) for anything related to politics or history. I rarely express a political opinion on Wikipedia and I don't intend to do so today. I intend to opine on the quality of Fox journalism. My normal editing field is 19th century US biography, though I stray occasionally into more modern subjects. Primarily I read history. I am a voracious news reader and watcher. I'm also a frequent reader of sources like CJR and Poynter which watch journalists at work. As a lay historian I've developed a healthy disrespect for newspapers as sources; there's often insuffient time for accuracy when the day's deadline draws near. IMHO today's television news shows and websites serve as the modern advertising-driven analogue. I've come to the conclusion over a number of years that cable news networks hold themselves up as reliable sources, but rarely pass the test. There's a focus on intensity over objectivity. But Murdock-owned media properties in general and Fox News in specific seem to operate much like the Hearst properties of old -- begin with a desired outcome and build articles and columns which cherrypick sources in order to convince the audience of the correctness of the desired outcome. Over time I have seen large a number of apparently manufactured artifacts (of which today's Epstein pic "gaffe" has coincidentally arrived on the last day of this RFC). All the hair-splitting related to news side and entertainment side misses the nugget: it is apparent to my eyes the news day at Fox begins with a subjective set of talking points management wants in viewers' brains and everything which is broadcast or uploaded during the day is designed to insert and support those talking points in the viewers' minds. I have stopped relying on them and I have seen sufficient evidence to believe Fox deliberately misleads and distorts the material they present. I have little doubt how human history will judge this era in US History. Fox News will, IMHO, be regarded as a prime representative of what went wrong in the news media of the early 21st century. BusterD (talk) 23:45, 5 July 2020 (UTC)
    • You're spot-on with the most important thing that people calling for Option 1 are missing: how can we separate their straight reporting from their talk shows when Fox makes no such distinction themselves? They may say they do, or at least said they did once, but it's obvious is practice that they're just paying lip service when the hosts are appearing throughout the day, and their "commentary" is unchecked by other hosts. When the same people are spouting the same errors with no challenge to the erroneous claims any time of the day, there's no meaningful distinction that can be made between the two. Top it off with the whole "talking points" slant to their news coverage, which has been known about since the George W Bush administration, and it's obvious that they are a propaganda outfit. oknazevad (talk) 13:50, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
    • @BusterD: you write: "begin with a desired outcome and build articles and columns which cherrypick sources in order to convince the audience of the correctness of the desired outcome." Bingo! That's a description of pseudo-journalism, which is basically journalistic pseudo-science. Fox News is not, and never was intended to be, a real "news" channel. It's a pseudo-journalistic propaganda machine. That's why the few real journalists, who occasionally report the facts that are uncomfortable to the network's agenda, get critcized by their own colleagues. Shep Smith finally gave up. No other channel has this situation, because their agenda is to report the facts. -- Valjean (talk) 15:23, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 for news. Their opinion pieces are no different than any other network's opinion pieces and should be quoted properly. Dennis Brown - 01:46, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 It is generally reliable. ‍‍Telluride (talk) 13:02, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 --Spiffy sperry (talk) 16:06, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 3 Having gone through the discussion and the evidence presented, I'd make my assessment taking them as the basis. While there's a fair lot of "Option 1" !votes, I can't help but notice that a considerable number of the points raised by those who are endorsing "Option 3" or "Option 4" have gone unaddressed.
Firstly, the major argument the former group does present is that of distinction between ententes of the FOX network; which would in effect present the need for segregated assessments for the distinct ententes if merited. One primary distinction being presented is that of network affiliates and the national news service. Another form of distinction being made is that of between parts of the national news service such as cable pundits, cable news and their online reproduction. However, relying on the academic sources presented one can ascertain that academia itself is not making a whole lot of distinction within parts of the national news service (through fox cable channel, pundits or otherwise and foxnews.com), the entirety of which also seems to be under the same editorial leadership. In line with that one should be able to make singular assessment of Fox News cable channel's broadcast and online derivative. Though there does seem to be validity for local affiliates to be considered as distinct as they do have separate editorial structures, are principally subjected to FCC regulations which are in variation and have not been generally subjected to an inspection in the said academic sources. Therefore they might require separate assessments, although it should still probably be noted that they are still not entirely independent of the former.
Secondly, the points raised in terms of climate change denial and Covid-19 misinformation have gone almost entirely unaddressed and almost certainly makes it deprecation worthy for any science related subject at the least. The news service also seems to endorse other conspiracy theories besides those mentioned and has frequent instances of misreporting; this might have been given less consideration if it weren't to be systemic as noted by the numerous academic sources which have been presented. The fact that this is also the most unaddressed point is the reason why in my opinion the news service should be considered generally unreliable. Since the Daily Mail comparison has been brought up it would completely fit in as a direct parallel in this regard. In addition there has been presented considerable evidence where FOX has indulged in deliberate fabrication especially in the case of major current events reporting. This points towards the exact opposite of a "reputation for fact-checking, accuracy and error-correction" which is a major requirement for a source to be generally considered reliable. The only argument against it is that it qualifies as a news organisation with an editorial team which honestly is not persuasive considering that it completely ignores the aforementioned detail.
Lastly, there actually seems to be a consensus that FOX is a biased source in favor of the conservatives in the United States. Partisanship or ideological bias would not be issue in of itself if it had not been brought to the effect of a lack of independence; there is ample evidence to the effect from academic sources which points towards a close identification with the Republican Party, at times described as the propaganda arm of the Republican Party. That makes it tricky as it lies in the grey area of being somewhere in between independent news and state sponsored propaganda. In the current scenario, I'd rather say that its in fact closer to the latter than the former taking into consideration that a lot of the evidence points to a close association with President Donald Trump.
All in a case for Option 4 on par with the Daily Mail might be made as well especially with regards to news from the post-2016 period due the last point while a case for Option 1 or Option 2 can still be made with regards to its local affiliates though ideally they should be left out of any assessment in this RfC, imv. Tayi Arajakate Talk 23:21, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Option 1 - stick with the status quo. WP:VERIFY, which says we should aim for verifiabilty, not truth, is the relevant policy here. Many respondents here have claiming FOX isn't reliable seem to be basing their assertions on their personal conclusions Fox isn't truthful.
Even The New York Times, and other RS considered the very most reliable, have had scandals when they learned their reporters had engaged in plagiarism, or had invented quotes, invented whole stories.
I think the real problem is that we have new or lazy contributors, who lapse from the NPOV, by not attributing opinions to their sources. These non-complying contributors will read an article, that makes assertion XYZ, and will leave out the attribution, when they add XYZ to article space, putting it in the wikipedia's voice, as if it were an established fact.
The appropriate solution for wikipedia contributors who put possibly untrue assertions from Fox in the wikipedia's own voice is not to bar using Fox as a source. The appropriate solution is for the rest of us to work to educate those non-complying contributors in how to attribute and neutrally cover assertions, form Fox, or the NYTimes. If we all more fully comply with NPOV then those occasions when Fox reporting, or the NYTimes reporting, includes assertions that weren't true, our coverage, nevertheless, measured up to policy, and doesn't have to be altered, when the untruth of our sources is revealed. Geo Swan (talk) 00:16, 7 July 2020 (UTC)

Discussion (Fox News)

  • US media landscape has changed a lot since 2010, and not to the better. That being said, I am interested to see what concrete examples of inaccuracies on Fox's part that can be found. Talk shows on any network should never be cited for facts imo. buidhe 20:08, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
    • I don't think lack of factual falsehoods makes a source reliable. Remember that the coverage of something in RS is also used for determining WP:WEIGHT in Wikipedia so if a fact collection is sufficiently biased or omits relevant info due to agenda pushing, it can end up tilting what we call the NPOV if we treat the fact selection as neutral. Facts themselves can also be distorted without being stated falsely outright, and the nature of agenda pushing is to do that. This is goes beyond Fox News. 2602:24A:DE47:BB20:50DE:F402:42A6:A17D (talk) 21:26, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
If factual accuracy is not the metric, then what is? If WP:RS is not about reliability, there's a danger that the policy will end up being used to remove sources simply because they cover issues that editors don't want to be included on Wikipedia. -Thucydides411 (talk) 19:14, 12 June 2020 (UTC)

@Atsme: Fair enough, the issue is that none of these were actually properly formatted as a RfC, though the 237 and 257 Archive discussions are substantial, I apologise for not checking thoroughly. By formatting this as a proper RfC, hopefully we can end the endless cyclical discussions about Fox News. Hemiauchenia (talk) 21:57, 7 June 2020 (UTC)

  • Also, even the Daily Mail being depreciated has not stopped endless discussions about it. Hemiauchenia (talk) 21:58, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
    Apples and oranges. Atsme Talk 📧 22:02, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
  • I think we need to keep in mind that the Wikipedia policy of reliable sources is editorial oversight. Fox News does fact checking like any other major news organization, but the end result is always disputable on significance and implications (just like CNNs or MSNBC's reporting). News organisations create narratives that often times are not real or are exaggerated (for example ideas like government collision or broad racism or social justice are not perceived in the same way by these organizations). But keep in mind that "truth" and "facts" on events that come out of any news organization will carry bias since they tend to interpret little facts like a case of police brutality and then extrapolate it to abstractions like racism or harassment and so on. When it comes to these mega interpretations, there is very little truth since there is no such thing as an organization that determines the truth of an interpretation. If Fox News has been discussed multiple times back to back recently then this is a closed debate.Ramos1990 (talk) 22:44, 7 June 2020 (UTC)
  • There is always a comment that we are talking about Fox news anchors “as separate from their cable pundits”. Firstly, the latter is what everyone watches and thinks of as Fox News. But there is another point we keep avoiding (at least as far as I’ve seen); and that is Fox broadcast versus the Fox website. The Fox website is cited heavily in WP. But, the site is embarrassing to read. The main stories are nearly always political attacks. If there is no news, they will go back and run stories about Benghazi and Lewinsky. O3000 (talk) 01:30, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
    Let's not make this about one topic, and whether a RS believes it 100% or not, or whether or not they choose to publish opposing views. That does not make them unreliable - it makes them opposition to one POV. We need diversity - not a single POV - and attempting to eliminate all opposition to a single scientific belief when there are others is censorship. This isn't a case of the world is round, not yet, anyway, so we give DUE to prevailing science theory and also include what the opposition believes (if it is also based on scientific theory). Science can factually and steadfastly state a lot of things as fact, just not questionable predictions which deserve mention. As long as there is scientific controversy, we include it - we don't have to believe it. Atsme Talk 📧 14:42, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • The references here have been moved to #References (Fox News), as the {{reflist-talk}} template captures all references above the template, including ones added in newer comments. Atsme's comment below was made when the references template looked like this: Special:Diff/961474909 § Discussion (Fox News). The {{reflist-talk}} template was originally in the bottom of the Responses section, then moved to the bottom of this Discussion section, and now finally to its own References section. — Newslinger talk 05:21, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
    The references above are either not reliable or not up-to-date (WP:RECENTISM) if they say Fox didn't retract the Seth Rich story - (and that is part of the reason this RfC needs an experienced closer who is not politically biased). See the NYTimes article which states: Fox News on Tuesday retracted a story linking the murder of a Democratic National Committee staff member with the email hacks that aided President Trump’s campaign, effectively quashing a conspiracy theory that had taken hold across the right-wing news media. It goes on to say (most importantly) that: "it also underscored a schism between the network’s news-gathering operation and one of its biggest stars: the conservative commentator Sean Hannity". Again, the news portion of FOX is a reliable source but like other cable news, the pundits are opinion. Oh, and The Washington Times did apologize and retract per this Vox article. I find the allegations that Fox News did something irreversibly wrong to be very disconcerting, and I do hope the closer of this RfC takes those misrepresentations into consideration. Atsme Talk 📧 17:58, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
  • The elephant in the room is that we always are coming back to Fox NEws because editors on all sides willing ignore NOT#NEWS and RECENTISM, rushing to put in breaking stories and commentary, or what I've seen called "hyperjournalism" (its gotten worse with how we've covered COVID) We can be up to date, but our up to the minute coverage should stick to bare facts and have nearly no coverage of anything controversial until that story has had a chance to go through the news cycle a few times (eg like the Rich story, or as an opposite example, the Covington MAGA hat kid from last year which has ended with egg on the WaPost and others' faces) We shouldn't be including any commentary from journalists or experts unless its actually part of the story (eg Trump's comments on mail-in ballots leading to Twitter's fact check leading to Trumps EO on Section 230 fully qualifies in the article on Section 230). But we have both new and experienced editors going around rushing to fill these in as soon as they happen. Now, I agree that short term, if I was pulling info from NYTimes in the short term compared to Fox News, I'd have less a concern, but if we were properly waiting until the "long term" (a few news cycles out), it is much much easier to realize that we can treat Fox News (the news desk, not the pundits) as an RS, but that with information from the multiple news cycles, we have a way to apply UNDUE appropriate to know if actually need to include them. Most of that time, that is "no", as they are usually repeating the same basic story from other good sources. This is in contrast to Daily Mail or Breitbart that under the same conditions, we'd have NOTHING usable because we simply outright cannot trust their material. This is how we can justify Fox as an RS but still respect that it's probably not going to be used often due to UNDUE, but we need more editors aware that respecting the principles of NOT#NEWS and RECENTISM will avoid having Fox being pushed as hard as a source (since ideally, we won't be seeing as much liberal opinion as quickly as possible either). --Masem (t) 19:21, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
    Masem, that's a very good point. Guy (help!) 12:22, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
    With all due respect to Masem, I would have equal concern over the coverage by the NYTimes considering their spin, mistakes and bad judgment calls when publishing material from anonymous sources that turned out to not be accurate throughout the left's Russian collusion conspiracy theory that was promoted by MSM based on the Steele dossier and false information provided to the FISA court. We should have waited per WP:RECENTISM. We cannot put 100% of our trust in online headlines and the instant news that follows those headlines, regardless of who is publishing it. The NYTimes' own executive editor brought to light the "unmistakeable anti-Trump" coverage. Perhaps WP editors who are anti-Trump themselves do not see anything wrong with the NYTimes being anti-Trump, and therein the problem lies. It is unequivocal bias, the same as it was when the right disliked Obama because it is politically motivated partisanship. In my Signpost Op-Ed this month, I added a link to the discussion with Ted Koppel who did an excellent job explaining the problem. It is real, and it does exist in internet, cable, broadcast and print political news media because we are dealing with a different era in journalism. Atsme Talk 📧 21:58, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
    Oh, I don't disagree that RECENTISM should apply equally to all sources and better to wait to add to judge when we have a better concept of the full picture, have most corrections in place, etc. For example, apparently the NYTimes took the analysis of Bolivia's elections possible fraud at face value that lead to Morales' loss (NYTimes was not the only thing going on). Now obviously, WP wasn't a part of that, but I mean, that situation or the MAGA Hat cases are examples that our most trusted sources can still be wrong in the short term. But were I to bet on which source would be less wrong in the short term, between the NYTimes and Fox? My money is on NYTimes. --Masem (t) 22:07, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
  • @Hemiauchenia: This edit has had this effect because it has taken the RfC statement beyond the bounds of brevity. Please amend the statement (not necessarily that line) to be less verbose, so that it will once again be listed on the RfC boards. --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 23:05, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
    @Redrose64: Sorry about that, is the amended version better below the word limit? Hemiauchenia (talk) 23:10, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
      Thank you Yes, it's displaying properly now. --Redrose64 🌹 (talk) 09:43, 9 June 2020 (UTC)
  • An additional comment: some of the views expressed in the discussion seem to equate finding Fox unreliable with having a liberal bias. I would point out that there are many much more serious and factually reliable conservative news sources, such as National Review, The Federalist, The Bulwark, The American Conservative, and Reason, to name a few. None of these will exhibit characteristics such as the tabloid tone and shock headline attributes of Fox. BD2412 T 04:45, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
    Please don't call Reason conservative. They favor legalization of all drugs (including crystal meth and heroin) legalization of prostitution, zero restrictions on immigration -- 100% open borders with no border patrol or DEA -- immediate closure of every US military base outside the US, no tariffs or trade restrictions, and equal marriage rights for gays. Those are not positions conservatives support. --Guy Macon (talk) 05:59, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
    Whether you consider Reason conservative is entirely based on whether you consider American Libertarianism a branch of conservatism. Personally, I would say so. Being within the loosely defined blocs of Liberal and Conservative certainly does not imply universal agreement. Devonian Wombat (talk) 07:21, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
    @Guy Macon: Reason is unquestionably conservative with respect to fiscal and economic policy, and minimizing government intervention. There is, of course, variation within conservatism that deviates from those principles in the service of empowering government to maintain notions of traditionalism, but the specific positions taken are highly liquid. Incidentally, opposition to gay marriage is no longer really a conservative position. Republicans are now just as likely to support gay marriage as to oppose it (including President Trump, an unwavering gay marriage supporter, for which he has been given little credit). Fox News itself has been called out by activists for becoming too pro-gay marriage. BD2412 T 15:13, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
  • While they overlap in some areas, no reasonable person considers US Libertarianism to be a branch of US conservatism. Again, legalizing heroin, opening up the borders, defunding the police, and solving the problem of prayer in government schools by getting rid of the government schools are not positions that are widely popular among any branch of US conservatism. I could also argue that abolishing the income tax, removing all restrictions on firearms, and closing down the FDA and FCC are not positions that are widely popular among any branch of US liberalism.
Related: World's Smallest Political Quiz.
Please note that I hold US Libertarians in the same low regard as I hold US Democrats, US Republicans, and US Greens. The greens and libertarians just haven't had the opportunity to disappoint us yet. --Guy Macon (talk) 17:44, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
Hmmm...so basically, you don't like US politics. Here on Bonaire, my needs align more with the Blue party. In the US, I'm up and down...  and still cling (does that make me a Klingon?) to the values of JFK, as best I can recall. I'm just not that into it. Atsme Talk 📧 23:45, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
  • BD2412, Oops. The Federalist just got banned from Google's ad platform due to publishing disinformation about BLM. [92] Guy (help!) 20:19, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
    • That is actually not what that article says (ZeroHedge was banned, while The Federalist was merely warned, apparently over "comments"), but even so, The Federalist remains some number of levels more reliable than Fox News. BD2412 T 20:25, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
      BD2412, a low bar indeed... Guy (help!) 21:09, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
      Guy, Zero Hedge is unreliable, we already know that - they said the protests were fake, and had already demonetized that part of their site (probably a video). The Federalist case was different - they were simply warned about monetizing race-related content which Google deems a violation of their monetization policy. NBC News stated: "The Federalist published an article claiming the media had been lying about looting and violence during the protests. All Google is doing is appeasing a British nonprofit group and preventing Google customers from earning clickbait revenue from Google placed ads. Look at the NBC misleading headline: Google bans two websites from its ad platform over protest articles - so what does it all actually mean? Google told The Federalist to demonitize (probably page ads and video) which means no clickbait ad revenue from Google for that content. Atsme Talk 📧 23:04, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
      Atsme, that's a very idiosyncratic presentation. No, they are not "appeasing" anybody. They have policies, a pressure group noted that the Federalist was violating those policies, and that Zero Hedge was publishing fake news while violating those polices. Google checked, agreed, and took action.
      Early reports conflated the two. Most have now been updated to correctly reflect the different actions taken. Guy (help!) 23:34, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Exactly - "Early reports conflated..." - that's why we have WP:RECENTISM & NOTNEWS, and why this RfC and the comments that conflate politcal commentary with Fox News are just plain wrong. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Atsme (talkcontribs) 08:32, June 17, 2020 (UTC)
  • Comment - It's an example of a massive double-standard on here that the UK-based Daily Mail was effectively banned but primarily US-based editors on here feel unable to apply the same logic to Fox News, which shares all of the DM's vices and virtues. FOARP (talk) 09:29, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
    • DM - and to be fair on the US - Breitbart - has been shown to actually falsify information to get the story they want. Fox News (the news side) may bias and swing a story's details to tell a specific angle to a story but we don't have yet anywhere close to the massive scale of falsification. (Misreporting with later redactions do not count because that we expect out of an RS). --Masem (t) 12:46, 12 June 2020 (UTC)
  • They all do it, David. ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN, MSNBC, NYTimes, WaPo - left-leaning media are not unlike the right because they are all spewing political commentary right on their front pages. CNN chooses to call their pundits "news journalists". The first sentence in the Don Lemon lead tells our readers that he is "an American television journalist" whereas Sean Hannity is "an American talk show host and conservative political commentator." Now look at Rachel Maddow - "an American television news program host and liberal political commentator." Wolf Blitzer, another inaccurate description of a political commentator vs journalist or newscaster/news anchor. Politico's Jack Shafer was on target when he wrote: "Singling out Blitzer for a thrashing does not exonerate the other cable news anchors—their crimes remain under investigation. The Situation Room and other less-bad CNN prime-time programs—Erin Burnett Outfront, Anderson Cooper 360° and CNN Tonight With Don Lemon—churn through their time slots lighting news fuses that promise fireworks but often deliver duds. Once you start viewing these CNN programs as talk shows about the news in which hosts interview reporters, “specialists” and newsmakers, and not as news programs, per se, your journalistic expectations recede." Fox News Channel defines their political commentators correctly and keep those shows separate from the news, but based on some of the comments above, several editors are still conflating the two, perhaps because they are not well-versed in the operations of television networks. I think PEW nailed it with their June 2018 survey, Between Factual and Opinion Statements in the News. Atsme Talk 📧 02:54, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
  • As you've been told several times, WP:OTHERSTUFFEXISTS is not a convincing argument at Wikipedia. We're talking about this thing, not other things - David Gerard (talk) 08:19, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
  • As you've been told several times... - wow, David, that sounds awfully bullyish. I'm not some child who has to be told anything. I welcome reminders - none of us are perfect - and you can certainly disagree with my position, but unless you can quote a policy that forbids such use of comparisons, you're just stating opinion, and I will continue to use comparisons to demonstrate the need for consistency in support of NPOV when making decisions as important as this one, and to overcome political bias in the decision-making process, perceived or otherwise. Happy editing! Atsme Talk 📧 19:08, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
WP:OTHERSTUFFEXISTS is about article notability, content, etc. We're discussing something much more general here - whether a major news source should be excluded. It is very important for decisions on which sources are considered reliable to be consistent. What appears to me to be happening is that people are trying to exclude Fox News for its failings, while ignoring the failings of equivalent news sources (CNN & MSNBC) that have very similar failings. The inconsistency appears to me to be politically motivated. I'm no fan of any of the cable news channels - they are all guilty of the same sorts of sensationalism and partisanship. However, if we're going to declare Fox News unreliable, we really have to declare CNN and MSNBC to also be unreliable. If we aren't consistent, then it looks very much like WP:RS is being applied only when it's politically convenient. -Thucydides411 (talk) 14:34, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
The statement above ignores a fundamental difference: "... trying to exclude Fox News for its failings, while ignoring the failings of equivalent news sources (CNN & MSNBC) that have very similar failings."
For CNN & MSNBC, such "failings" are a "bug", IOW exceptional errors they immediately correct. For Fox News, such "failings" are a "feature" of their modus operandi. Unless called out on a large scale by myriad other major sources, they will not correct the error, and other extreme right-wing media do the same. That is a major difference between left-wing media and right-wing media. The left uses fact-checkers and corrects errors, whereas the right ignores fact-checkers, attacks fact-checkers (Trump told his supporters to not believe fact-checkers), and persistently uses propaganda as a tool, even when it has been proven to be false/fake.
Fox News is no longer just a right-wing RS we can use. It has slid to the far-right (CNN is considered slightly right-wing by the rest of the world) and is focused as a tool of Trump, with a "Trump-Fox News feedback loop" (search that term) that is documented as a phenomenon. Here is just one article. There are many. -- Valjean (talk) 18:58, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
Your argument is similar to others, all of which have been successfully disputed throughout this discussion. The oppose iVotes appear to be very partisan in nature, and have failed to produce any evidence that supports downgrading Fox News as a generally RS. Our own WP article describes our left bias, Ideological bias on Wikipedia#Bias in Wikipedia content in relation to US politics, and that is what we need to fix and what I believe we are doing now to preserve and maintain a NPOV for the benefit of the project overall. Atsme Talk 📧 19:26, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Atsme, no, they do not fabricate stuff. They may spin, and they may make mistakes. Fox News has been literally photoshopping a guy with a gun into images of otherwise peaceful protests. That is fake news. Guy (help!) 20:21, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
  • JzG, they actually do, including the New York Times and Pulitzer Prize winning stories. Remember Janet Cooke and The Washington Post who returned their Pulitzer? Do the research, Guy. You once told me I was naive - uhm, no. It's not me. After over 35 years in & out of newsrooms, tv studios, post production, artwork & layouts, typesetting - I am not the least bit hesitant in telling it like it is while backing it up with RS to support my position which I just did. Atsme Talk 📧 20:55, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
    Atsme, this is exactly the problem. A reporter at NYT faked reports (quite common). This was detected by the Times and he was pushed out. With the Fox pictures, they are still defending them and there has been no action, that we know of, against those responsible.
    And then there's the false and misleading stories on COVID-19, and climate change, and the many other instances.
    You can excuse thema ll away one by one if you like, but in the end the pattern is clear and systemic and entirely in line with the academic research that shows Fox News to have joined FNC in using an agenda-driven, not fact-driven, model. Guy (help!) 21:18, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Guy, my views align more closely with Masem. I'm not making any excuses - I'm simply stating facts. After reading your essay, I'm of the mind that we will probably find ourselves in disagreement more often than not so I'm going to leave it there. I've got plenty of work to do helping to reduce the AfC/NPP backlog which keeps growing. Happy editing! Atsme Talk 📧 13:31, 17 June 2020 (UTC)
There's no evidence yet - and I'd love to be proven wrong - of the news content (not headlines, not photos) coming from the reporters and checked by the editors out of the Fox news side of intentional/malicious fabrication as was clearly shown on the DM/Brietbart cases. That would be a slam dunk in closing this against the use of Fox News. But everything listed above that is claim of Fox fabrication is either being due to Fox's bias (not fabrication but presenting in a specific angle which RS does not judge but cautions about when NPOV comes along), corrected stories (of which we can play mind games of whether these were intentional or not until pointed out), or simply outside of the news-desk editorial content, like the Seattle picture stuff. I'm trying to be the devil's advocate (literally, almost) here - There's a lot of personal and other reasons that people want to see Fox News demoted from reliable, and I would tend to agree that net result, but we need to prove the case out on this, otherwise, any weak rational can come back to bite us in the future ("You demote Fox for fake headlines, CNN has done fake headlines..." type logic). And that's why I'm point out that even with Fox news still considered reliable, UNDUE drives away from its use as a source when other sources covering the same event exist. --Masem (t) 13:38, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
  • I am of the same opinion as Jimmy Wales on this..."You shouldn't really use Wikipedia as the sole source for anything, ever. You shouldn't use anything as the sole source for anything, in my view."[43] Wikipedia is an Anglo-American encyclopedia, and so it values western opinions/references/sources and denounces other news agencies as "government controlled/funded", when it is clear that American and British journalists either toe the line and use government press releases as fact, or they are ostracised. What I am saying is that every editor must be careful, what they are publishing, for instance, Bolivian coup. Every western news organisation shouted out "election fraud", only for MIT to state (months later) "There is not any statistical evidence of fraud that we can find,” wrote John Curiel and Jack R Williams, both from MIT, adding that the conclusions of an audit by the Organization of American States “would appear deeply flawed”.[44]. My message, be very sceptical of western news agents (BBC, CNN, Fox), as much as eastern news agents from China or Russia.SethWhales talk 15:35, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
    +1 - I'm on the same page, Seth Whales. As several of us have repeated over and over again, comply with WP:RECENTISM, WP:NOTNEWS and exercise caution toward all news sources in today's clickbait environment, especially political news which in and of itself is subject to the biases of the authors/journalists/publishers. If we had been adhering to our PAGs, this issue never would have been brought up, much less noticed - it would have disappeared in the anus of internet history. Correction was made/published by the news source - end of story. Atsme Talk 📧 18:40, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Deprecate Fox News for AMPol2. We don't save a source because only two out of a dozen+ of its hosts are good. When it's accurate, other sources should be used. Speaking only of Fox News, not its talking heads, with the exception of Shep Smith (consistently good, but no longer at Fox) and Chris Wallace (he occasionally dares to do the right thing), Fox News should be deprecated for politics. Those two hosts are the rare exception that proves the rule. The other hosts in the newsroom are generally unreliable.
Fox employees leaving the company have described the "newsroom" (not just any room) as "an extension of the Trump White House."[93] The situation is worse now, to the point where the influence of Fox News and Fox & Friends on Trump and the GOP cannot be ignored. The tail is wagging the dog:
"Fox News is no longer the propaganda arm of the Republican Party. The Republican Party is the legislative arm of Fox News." -- David Atkins, Washington Monthly
Deprecate it for AMPol2, which is not a total ban. When Wallace and others are accurate, they can still be used for politics, but we only know that by comparing them with other sources, so we should generally use those sources. (The rest of the hosts should be blacklisted for politics.) -- Valjean (talk) 15:37, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
  • A lot of people seem to be citing Politifact's ratings on Fox News to prove that they are not reliable. They claim that 60% of Politifact's ratings for Fox News are completely or partially false. This is not a good way of analyzing the reliability of a news source, because it is very clear that Politifact websites doesn't factcheck absolutely everything Fox News reports. Also, I heard an editor say that 44% of Politifact's ratings for NBC are completely or partially false. If Politifact's ratings are the reason that you think Fox News is unreliable, you should also think NBC is unreliable. Scorpions13256 (talk) 20:26, 21 June 2020 (UTC)

I would remind editors we are discussing Fox news, Just Fox news. Whataboutism is not a valid argument.Slatersteven (talk) 17:39, 20 June 2020 (UTC)

All corporate-controlled news media, manufactures consent on behalf of their corporate donors/sponsors. Whether it be pro-Republican (Fox) or pro-Democrat (CNN & MSNBC). GoodDay (talk) 15:00, 27 June 2020 (UTC)

Picture manipulation by Fox?

Just saw this tweet, claiming blatant photo manipulation by the Fox News site. It's 2am here - is anyone here familiar with the originals? If true, this sort of practice would rule out Option 1 - David Gerard (talk) 00:58, 13 June 2020 (UTC)

@David Gerard and David Gerard: here's another source:
https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/politics/fox-news-runs-digitally-altered-images-in-coverage-of-seattles-protests-capitol-hill-autonomous-zone/
BTW, your comment ended up in the wrong section, so I moved it here. I hope you don't mind. -- Valjean (talk) 03:50, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
David Gerard, there have been several examples of this in the past, a few of which can be found in the article Fox News controversies, though there are a few others that didn’t get enough coverage to be due there. I sort of agree that this should preclude Option 1 to some extent, as this isn’t a regular occurrence from other outlets, but it happens periodically with some degree of regularity with Fox. I would presume a lot of people are !voting “Option 1“ based on the Fox News of a decade ago, or are simply unaware of these kinds of things. Symmachus Auxiliarus (talk) 04:04, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
I mean, pictures shouldn't be considered as part of the story written by the byline of the author of the article. That's some guy trying to illustrate the paper, and just like headlines and anything else outside the article should not be taken as representative of what passes the editorial desk. It is clear example of the bias that Fox will try to do which, as I've commented below, usually makes their covers just unnecessary to include when other more RSes are covering the same thing if we are taking cautious steps in applying NOT#NEWS and RECENTISM. --Masem (t) 04:28, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
I don't buy this excuse. Making stuff up is making stuff up. OK, headlines should be disregarded and not cited—for example, I have seen a false headline in a very reliable paper (Times of Israel), albeit it was quickly fixed. Deliberately falsifying images, however, is falsification and my standard for deprecation is "deliberately and consistently reports falsehoods." buidhe 06:04, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
It was a montage - most people familiar with images can see that...but it appears Fox competitors are scraping the barrel to find fault. Life goes on. It's not half as bad as publishing images of children in cages and falsely claiming it was Trump when the photos were from the Obama administration, and worse, promoting a presidential nominee who lied about it. Again, as I've stated above - exercise caution, comply with WP:RECENTISM and wait for the retrospective from historians and academics. We need to stop with the Twitter feed - it's unreliable - and stop breaking news - WP:NOTNEWS. Follow our PAGs and we'll be fine. Atsme Talk 📧 15:25, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
Come off it. They're blatantly and intentionally lying. This is beyond the pale. Stop apologizing for liars. oknazevad (talk) 15:36, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
A “montage”? Is any other reliable source characterizing it this way except Fox News itself? Symmachus Auxiliarus (talk) 15:42, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
The desk jockies that write headlines for CNN and other sites are just as bad in terms of writing clickbait titles (there's a whole case around Lawrence Lessig and the NYTimes just over a bad headline, despite the article content being legit). [94]. (Whether that suit will develop into anything we don't know, just the point that headlines are written without the care of the body of the articles). This happens across the board, but since we don't use headlines or pictures or picture captures as "reliable" because of the fact they are written outside the editorial process, this type of manipulation should not be counted against the reliability of the reporters and editors above the Fox News desk. Bias of the overall work, heck yes. --Masem (t) 17:19, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
The more respectable and reliable conservative sources that I mentioned in the previous section—e.g., National Review, The The Federalist, The Bulwark, The American Conservative, and you can throw in The Wall Street Journal—wouldn't be caught dead engaging in tabloid practices like this. Considering the fact that Fox's prominent posting of this panic-inducing image coincided with one of the worst stock market drops of the year, I would think that Wikipedia should definitely avoid linking to such content. Perhaps the best solution would be some means of examining potential uses of Fox as a source on a case by case basis, with a consensus-based process to vet individual news articles for propriety before using them. BD2412 T 17:37, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
I agree those sources would not manipulate photos like that, but again, we're looking to what is usable by WP, the article content, not the photos or headlines. That they do that type of manipulation should put up a big caution that they are biased outside the newsdesk and thus when applying UNDUE for inclusion, that weighs heavily against them. That's how you apply consensus on a case-by-case basis without eliminating the use of Fox for most other topics where there are few issues with their reporting, and without applying "not reliable for X topics" which always get plagued with debate if that's used. I know it seems earlier just to say Fox is not an RS, but the evidence is not there for that... But we have ways to work around the problems of its bias as long as consensus-based processes build on NPOV are used on case-by-case. --Masem (t) 17:45, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
- Please...see our WP article Photo manipulation##Use_in_journalism. I would think the montage was used to depict different events in one image, such as the protestors in the images published by The Detroit News which shows armed protestors. Armed - with guns. First of all, Tucker Carlson, the subject of the tweet in this particular discussion, is not a newscaster, rather he is a pundit so why are we having this discussion at all, David Gerard? Hannity is also a pundit and he also addressed the gun toting protestors. There are pictures in the article I linked to with the caption Armed men weapons in the Senate gallery on Thursday, April 30. (Photo: Craig Mauger, The Detroit News) but there are also other images with gun toting protestors. Are you saying there were no guns, and the image is a false depiction of the protest? Atsme Talk 📧 17:46, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
Please...see our WP article Photo manipulation##Use_in_journalism which is a subsection of the section "Political and ethical issues", and links to Photojournalism#Ethical,_legal,_and_social_considerations. You're providing evidence against your own position here. Photomanipulation in this manner is a deprecation offense - David Gerard (talk) 17:57, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
What newscast used the image? Atsme Talk 📧 18:02, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
Nevermind, I found the retraction which states: Editor’s Note: A FoxNews.com home page photo collage which originally accompanied this story included multiple scenes from Seattle’s “Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone” and of wreckage following recent riots. The collage did not clearly delineate between these images, and has since been replaced. In addition, a recent slideshow depicting scenes from Seattle mistakenly included a picture from St. Paul, Minnesota. Fox News regrets these errors. If you're talking about deprecating based on that, then a whole lot of once considered RS are going down with it, including the AP, [95], and so is LA Times, National Archives, well...here's a short list. Atsme Talk 📧 18:33, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
Even their "correction" was false. It was not a collage. It was a photo-shopped image inserting a weapon carrying person into the image to push a false narrative that the POTUS is pushing. O3000 (talk) 19:22, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
The correction was not false - and what "false narrative" is POTUS pushing? Atsme Talk 📧 18:08, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
  • All of them - of all major networks, despite claims to the contrary by others, FOX is the only one whose main network coverage is specifically regularly factually inaccurate. While MSNBC or CNN may have programs that are informed by a Talking Head, or their news and op-ed can become amalgamated because modern reporting has become that way inclined (with US media in particular), FOX is the only news source that openly leads with journalists that aren't journalists, repeating conspiracy theories from the internet in live bulletin and stories that are not listed as opinion. This isn't a Tucked Carlson issue, this is objectively bad journalism across the board with terrible editorial decisions being made - the kind of decisions that lead to Piers Morgan losing his job in the UK, but lead to very little in the US other than defence of the behaviour because of WHATABOUTISM because of the perception that the largely centrist position of reality is to the left of the general perception of the average conservative American. As Colbert once said, "reality has a well known liberal bias". FOX is the only mainstream network where it is clear that entire topics are handled by partisan groups that are different to the core journalists that they actually have in their employ. It's why they can challenge the president for factual inaccuracies on Monday and appear legitimate, but still be publishing their own factual inaccuracies for days after until surreptitiously changing their articles without indicating what has been later altered. Most reliable networks publish their "corrections" openly. FOX is well documented for failing to do so, and often allowing their affiliates to continue using the incorrect versions of events in their broadcasts even while amending their incorrect news articles. Koncorde (talk) 05:22, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
  • This isn't necessarily an issue that's exclusive to Fox. MSNBC, for instance, has been caught deceptively editing recordings to portray figures in an unflattering light. Take this, when they deliberately presented Mitt Romney comments out of context, or this, when they spliced together George Zimmerman's 911 call to make it sound like he was racist. JOEBRO64 12:01, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
    • Two wrongs do not make a right, and this is a rather more incendiary situation than Zimmerman's.Slatersteven (talk) 12:05, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
      • ...what? Why should we treat Fox differently than other outlets that are guilty of similar manipulation? MSNBC was just caught last month doing it again with William Barr; it's been a recurring issue with that network for years. As some users, like Ad Orientem, Atsme, and Thucydides411, said above, I think some editors are treating Fox differently because it has a political slant they don't agree with. JOEBRO64 14:54, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
        • I can only speak to my perspective on this, but I think part of the issue here is the frequency with which both this issue arises, and the frequency with which there are multiple factual errors in their reporting, and how skewed the presentation is, including “news” programs such as Bret Baier. As well as the general reluctancy to highlight omissions and errors. It happens more often with Fox than with most other mainstream sources. Symmachus Auxiliarus (talk) 15:01, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
        • Because faking pictures of people carrying guns at a time when there are troops (even if they are Saturday afternoon ones) paroling the streets of some cities and the president calling for the army to intervene is rather more serious in its potential repercussions and thus should have been dealt with with far more care. Also Otherstuffdoesnotesxist is an invalid an argument as wp:otherstuff. As well as (as I already said) just because wee do not prohibit X does not mean we should not prohibit Y (rather its an argument for also prohibiting X). And to add, this is fox news, not commentary or chat shows. One of the argument is has always been "But its not Fox news that does it", guess what...it does. Moreover No its not because they are right wing, its because this had the potential to inflame a very very dangerous situation (and , by the way, the Daily Mirror is not right wing).Slatersteven (talk) 15:02, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
        TheJoebro64, MSNBC is an opinion broadcaster. We've long recognised the difference between Fox News and FNC; in the same way, we recognise the difference between NBC and MSNBC. The difference here is that there are multiple images, and they were used by Fox News, not FNC, to promote a false narrative around the Seattle protests. If Fox had put their hands up, we might be able to have a conversation aboutt hat, but their apology amounts to "sorry we got caught". They have not acknowledged the underlying problem, still less undertaken to do anything about it. Guy (help!) 09:06, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
    TheJoebro64, If there's a pattern of MSNBC doing this I would also support it being rated generally unreliable at an RFC. buidhe 16:56, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
Speaking as a journalist, the manipulation is an egregious violation of photojournalism ethics, and the lack of a proper retraction that acknowledges that the original images were manipulated makes the issue massively worse. This is a perfect example of why option 1 is unacceptable. {{u|Sdkb}}talk 19:21, 13 June 2020 (UTC)

Apparently not just one image, and not just run in one segment, and so obvious they had to know [[96]].Slatersteven (talk) 17:55, 13 June 2020 (UTC)

Slatersteven, this is an absolute slam dunk. Literal fake news. Guy (help!) 09:00, 16 June 2020 (UTC)

Here [[97]] is the edited report where they have removed the image, note they do not actually admit it was faked. So no they are not owning up to it.Slatersteven (talk) 18:08, 13 June 2020 (UTC)

Retraction statement: Fox News in a statement said it "regrets these errors," specifically for not clearly delineating between the images. Can we move on? Atsme Talk 📧 18:14, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
That is not a retraction, they do not say "we used fake imagery" do they?Slatersteven (talk) 18:16, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
IN fact I would go further, by not admitting the picture was fake they are (in effect) saying it was genuine.Slatersteven (talk) 18:19, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
Well, don't go too far - see my comment above. Atsme Talk 📧 18:37, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
I would, the image was a cut and paste job, and they stand by its authenticity by not admitting it was faked.Slatersteven (talk) 19:12, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
That "retraction" does not acknowledge that the original imagery was manipulated. This makes the error far worse, not better. So no, we should absolutely not "move on" — this is a clear current example of the kinds of problems Fox News has. {{u|Sdkb}}talk 19:14, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
There is little question that the final image - the armed person in front of the Seattle shot - was designed to manipulate the reader to think that the SAZ was being patrolled by armed militia-like people. But is the image itself "manipulated" ? Adding a clearly second image atop a first ("count the pixels" may seem trite but the cut-off elbow is an obvious sign this wasn't anywhere close to trying to be a pixel-perfect digital manipulation) I will agree with what is said from the NPPA in Seattle Times' report [98] that they needed to have marked that from an ethical standpoint, which is the key problem here when we talk about bias; even if they had that statement, that's still a very biased combination of elements designed to manipulation the average reader's thinking. Other sources have done this before: File:OJ_Simpson_Newsweek_TIME.png the infamous case of Time darkening the photo of OJ for example. This is why we ignore headlines, section titles, photos, and other incidental materials as part of what we consider "reliable" for any reliable source, because that's a whole different editorial team from the people writing and editing the news, all designed to draw the reader's eye, for any work. I will still argue that this bias from Fox can be used in most problematic cases to eliminate it as a source when UNDUE is taken into account, but no need to touch it as an RS source (from its news desk, obviously not from its opinion side) --Masem (t) 19:54, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
(edit conflict) WaPo stated: "The misleading material spliced a June 10 photograph of an armed man at the Seattle protests with different photographs — one also from June 10, of a sign reading, “You Are Now Entering Free Cap Hill,” and others from images captured May 30 of a shattered storefront and other unrest downtown." The retraction is self-explanatory but WaPo further stated that Fox News explained there is an "editor’s note appended to three online articles" which I've already provided. In this case, the man with the gun was standing in front of a car at CHAZ on June 10th during the Seattle protests (the David Ryder image). His image was digitally copied, and photoshopped into the Fox montage and into another image to show him standing beside the CHAZ sign. That is typically handled by a separate dept. such as artwork & layout for the website. That's where online publications can get in trouble unlike newsprint which afforded the publishers more time to prep and check, and even then it wasn't 100% foolproof. The image of the man with the gun is real per the Seattle Times: The June 10 photo of an unidentified man with a gun standing in front of a car in CHAZ was taken by Seattle freelance photographer David Ryder, who distributed the photo through Getty Images. Fox News retracted it as responsible news networks are expected to do. It's a done deal. Somebody is probably going to be fired or moved to another dept., which is typically what happens in such cases. Atsme Talk 📧 20:28, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
And what about the image of him also standing in front of a smashed shop, how did they explain that? Or the one oh the same bloke, in the same stance standing next to a free zone sigh?Slatersteven (talk) 10:23, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
You keep repeating the same thinig over and over - look at the Seattle Times article - it is explained in detail with the photos. Atsme Talk 📧 17:32, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
[[99]] "Fox News is one such media outlet that published a series of articles on how the Seattle 'autonomous zone' has armed guards and local businesses are being threatened with extortion, and how the Seattle Police has been urged to take back control from "brazen, anti-cop anarchists." "One image shows the armed man standing in front of what appears to be a smashed retail store".Slatersteven (talk) 17:36, 14 June 2020 (UTC)

However, social media users were quick to notice that the images in all the Fox News articles had one thing in common – they all featured the same armed white individual wearing a bulletproof vest and holding an assault weapon. After some digging, users discovered that Fox News had photoshopped the image of the armed guard into all of its images to portray a more "dangerous" situation in the self-declared autonomous zone."

  • Seems to me this is rather serious. We have the POTUS claiming that antifa is involved with the demonstrations and declaring that antifa is a terrorist group. We have the Seattle police saying this might spread to other cities. Then, Fox publishes a fake photo seemingly supporting Trump’s claims. All of this together pushes an image of the country under siege by armed terrorists starting a violent revolution. This is in a heated atmosphere, in a country with guys with AK47s waiting for a race war. O3000 (talk) 20:14, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Photos are ALREADY considered unreliable for use as a source. Blueboar (talk) 20:29, 13 June 2020 (UTC)
Well, yes (although I can't actually find a guideline to that effect). But, suppose a source fakes a photo of Trump starting the fire behind the church that he held a bible in front of. Would you continue to support such a source as reliable? Headlines are often exaggerated. But, actually faking a photo to push a conspiracy theory favorable to the POTUS that a "news" source has consistently supported is beyond the pale. We have to draw a line somewhere. O3000 (talk) 00:19, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
Its not about using the photograph(S)it is the fact that it was a lie broadcast on fox news (and other parts of the Fox empire). Its the fact it shows they make shit up.Slatersteven (talk) 10:26, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
I just read this entire thread and carefully looked at the webpages/images referenced. The obvious "lying by Photoshop" and the weaselly retraction that failed to acknowledge that they lied by Photoshop made me change my opinion of Fox News from "Use with care" to "Generally unreliable for facts, events, interviews and quotes." Those images shown at [100] raise the question: if Fox News is willing to mislead me about where a particular person carrying a gun and wearing a green mask was standing, how can I trust anything else they present to me? --Guy Macon (talk) 12:47, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
So let's now declare that all RSes that uses clickbait and misleading headlines be also "generally unreliable" which is all of them including the NYTimes, if you go that direction. Pictures, like headlines, are not part of the reliable content we are judging or can use in WP. This is why we have that line being drawn. --Masem (t) 13:17, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
This was not a headline, click bait or otherwise, it was included in multiple programs across Fox.Slatersteven (talk) 13:45, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
It is still part of the content outside of control of the actual editorial control of the news desk. Its stuff we as editors can't use as part of a topic. If we want to make reliable sources be responsible and reliable for all content they publish - headlines, photos, etc. - so be it, but that would affect many "normally RS" sources which I don't think is the goal here. --Masem (t) 13:55, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
What Fox news has no control over what photos they include in a news broadcast? Christ I could not view the Seattle time article and so assumed the picture I could see was a mock up by the Seattle times because it was such an obvious fake. When I saw in fact what I assumed was a joke at foxes expense was actually what they had tried to use (not once but multiple times) I had no choice but to change my choice. Sorry but "no one even thought "this looks a bit off" better not use it" becasue "well its not MY job to think" is not a defence.Slatersteven (talk) 14:01, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
Consider what parts of a Fox News broadcast we'd use within articles presuming they were reliable - we can only use what is said by the anchors and any quoted text from video interviews or news clips. What's said by the anchors is copyproofed text from the news department, which is what we're looking at here, and nothing implies that the clips and interviews are being tampered with (outside of cutting them to show Fox's bias). Now, if Fox News was playing with splicing or deepfake game with interviews during those segments, that the equivalent of the DM falsification that we can work from to deprecate Fox. --Masem (t) 14:09, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
"President thingywobble was not seen at a press interview" cue fake picture of President thingywobble shaking hands with a child rapist "and the white house has not answered our request for clarification of where he it", yes a picture can be used to mislead whilst the words do not, its called a dog whistle. This is my last word here, we should not use news organisations that actually fake content, not even dishonestly edit, actually fake it.Slatersteven (talk) 14:21, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
Masem, that might carry some weight if the news desk had issued a statement and demanded disciplinary action against the person responsible. Not seeing any evidence of that.
This lends credence to the theory that Shep Smith was the canary in the mine. Guy (help!) 21:22, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
Again, devils advocate here: when other RSes have screws up like this like Time's OJ picture/etc. have we expected them to call out the person responsible? RS demands editorial control which, even as a stretch here because the photo side is outside the news department, still happened, but does it require appropriate disciplinary action? There's clearly a huge weight of bias to want to tip Fox news into deprecation, and certainly enough of these things that it would seem easiest to be done with it by doing so, but we're going to have people come back to this case and use arguments we're setting here against other RSes to argument for their deprecation over and over and over again, so lets make sure that we are doing it.
The other route, which is circular but would be a lot easier to say why Fox needs to be deprecated, is to modify RS to not only talk about editorial control, but where appropriate, particularly for a mainstream source, adherence for journalistic ethics. Of which the list of misdeeds by Fox (from its news team) starts to grow incredibly long, while leaving little of our main RS untouched. It might take a way a few other sources that are biased that don't show ethics (which I would sort of demand/expect in the AP2 field if we went that way) but I would guess at the benefit of putting Fox into the deprecated category this would be an acceptable loss, to speak --Masem (t) 21:37, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
On the question of where we talk about headlines not being an RS, Wikipedia:A headline is not a reliable source this essay came out of discussion last month [101] that we all agreed headlines were not RSes from past discussions we never really codified that. --Masem (t) 13:29, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Rushing to judgment on the basis of one recent incident (in which Fox News issued corrections) would be very unwise. Letting momentary outrage drive long-term decisions on which sources are reliable would be very short-sighted. Based on this rationale, we could have banned any number of reliable sources. In December 2016, the Washington Post ran a false story about Russia supposedly hacking into a utility grid in Vermont. The story was widely reprinted and caused a good deal of panic before it turned out to be completely false - one laptop that was not connected to the utility's control systems had malware that's widely available to hackers online. The Washington Post issued a half-way correction to the story (mentioning that the computer wasn't attached to the utility's control systems, but not mentioning that the malware isn't connected to Russia), but kept the misleading title in place. The Washington Post acted irresponsibly by running a dubious story that aligns with their political outlook, but which a bit of research would have shown to be completely unsupported, and then failed to fully correct the story. Yet it would be really short-sighted to use this one instance to rule that the Washington Post is not a reliable source. I'm sure that there wouldn't be a widespread call by Wikipedians to rule out the Washington Post anyways, because the Washington Post's editorial slant aligns much better with the views of most Wikipedians than that of Fox News does. -Thucydides411 (talk) 14:25, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
You could always nominate it and see.Slatersteven (talk) 14:29, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
Actually, I don't see how that WaPo story was "false". They correctly reported what officials said. I don't see how WaPo faked anything and they made no claims in their own voice. A far cry from digitally altering a photo, and claiming another was from a different city. And let us not pretend this was "one recent incident". Fox is on this page on a regular basis. O3000 (talk) 14:34, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
That's a bit like when Fox News makes absurd statements, phrased as a question. The Washington Post's article repeatedly says that Russia hacked the utility, but appends some version of "officials say." In fact, I recall arguing with editors at Russian interference in the 2016 United States election (including some of those who have responded to me here) back around that time about these very sorts of claims. There were many editors were insisting that these sorts of claims had to be stated in Wikivoice, because the US intelligence agencies are reliable, and also arguing against interpreting many of these statements as claims made by officials - but rather as claims made by the Washington Post and other newspapers. For example, take this sentence in the Washington Post article:

The penetration may have been designed to disrupt the utility’s operations or as a test by the Russians to see whether they could penetrate a portion of the grid.

That sentence appears to state, as a fact, that the penetration occurred, and back then, I'm sure those generally arguing for inclusion of as much Russiagate material as possible would have argued that that statement should be interpreted factually (for an example, take a look at this discussion).
The Washington Post's article spawned a whole spate of articles in other news sources, with titles directly stating that Russia had hacked the utility. BBC: "'Russia hacking code' found on Vermont utility computer". Reuters: "Russian hackers penetrated Vermont electric utility - Washington Post". Politico: "Vermont utility confirms system breach by Russians". NBC News: "Vermont Electricity Department Finds Malware Linked to Russian Hackers". Boston Globe: "Vermont utility finds malware code attributed to Russians". The Washington Post did not do basic due diligence on the claims made by the officials, and those claims were debunked by others within days, leading to the Washington Post to correct some - but not all - of the false claims made in the article. If you were only to read that one Washington Post article and the editor's note at the top, you would not know that the malware involved is widely available to hackers - not just Russian state hackers.
In other words, the Washington Post uncritically presented the claims of government officials, and appeared to repeat their claims in its own voice in places. That led to widespread coverage claiming - as a fact - that Russia had hacked the utility. The story then fell apart after basic inspection, which the Washington Post had failed to do before running the article, and the Washington Post never fully corrected the article. But that one incident (and it's not the only from that time involving the Washington Post, including the infamous "PropOrNot" article) should not lead the Washington Post to be listed as unreliable. Making decisions based on individual stories like this - especially in the heat of the moment - is bad practice. -Thucydides411 (talk) 19:38, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
Surely WaPo is not responsible for what is published in other sources. The WaPo article appears to be correct as it repeatedly attributes, as they should. O3000 (talk) 20:18, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
In the sentence I quoted above, they did not clearly attribute the statement. But more than that, the Washington Post failed to do even basic verification of what the government officials were telling it, and the story collapsed within days, once other news agencies approached the story with greater rigor. Yet the Washington Post never fully corrected the article. I don't see how you can view this as anything other than a failure to live up to basic journalistic practices. -Thucydides411 (talk) 13:36, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
Thucydides, that argument is an example of the kind of dumbfoundingly vacuous cherrypicking that is at the core of this RfC. Are we ready to have editors falsely and routinely hold WaPo's 150+ year record on a par with Fox? Just about every website posts at least a sizable percentage of fact. Today it is Sunday. It may rain next week. If that's your best shot, we are never going to reach consensus above option 3. Please try to make comments that do not deny the central issue. SPECIFICO talk 15:53, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
@Thucydides411: That's a great demonstration of a particularly egregious failure on the part of the Washington Post. On the other hand @SPECIFICO:, your reply is, to use your own words, "an example of the kind of dumbfoundingly vacuous" approaches some editors take towards civility, which is not only required by policy here but also useful in life. Surely there's no need to scrape the bottom of the barrel. -Darouet (talk) 03:17, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Correct me if I'm wrong, but it is getting closer to election time in the US, right? I'm of the mind that the upcoming election might be part of the reason for the repeated attempts to eliminate Fox News as a generally RS, and with such vengeance vehemence in a try-and-try again effort to reach what has been an elusive result. I have provided the following quote as an aside to the fact that Fox News has been the #1 rated cable news channel for 18 consecutive years,[45] much to the dismay of their competitors and political opposition; many of whom continue to throw stones at Fox News from glass houses.[46] I would have cited the NYTimes or WaPo instead of Forbes for Fox's rating but lo and behold they did not publish even a blurb about it, which speaks volumes as to why we should not eliminate or downgrade all of our RS, like Forbes and the Washington Times, based purely on political bias. Anyway, the following is quoted from a literature review in the International Journal on Digital Libraries. It made me go "Hmmm..." so I thought it was important to share it as part of this discussion in the event political bias might be a factor in this RfC, unknowing or otherwise, and if it is, then at least now we are better able to understand why:

"Not all frame analyses focus on the text of news articles. For instance, DellaVigna and Kaplan analyzed the gradual adoption of cable TV of Fox News between 1996 and 2000 to show that Fox News had a “significant impact” on the presidential elections. Essentially, the study analyzed whether a district had already adopted the Fox News channel, and what the election result was. The results revealed that the Republican party had an increased vote share in those towns that had adopted Fox News."[47]

Atsme Talk 📧 21:25, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
Atsme, this is an odd edit. The study you linked to does indeed say that Fox has had an undue effect on elections. It also stated that Fox was significantly slanted and that Fox viewers were the most uninformed about the Iraq War. So yes, we are trying to reduce dependence on an unreliable source as per guidelines. So yes, it is getting closer to election time in the US, right? But, your claim that those efforts to stop using a bad source is based upon “vengeance“ is a violation of AGF and CIV and completely ignores that they simply don’t like usage of bad sources, while you think you are on the side of goodness to continue usage of a source your own citation criticizes so heavily. O3000 (talk) 00:44, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
Thanks for bringing that to my attention. I corrected it - that was not the word I originally intended to use. I'm actually done here. Happy editing. Atsme Talk 📧 03:29, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
Lately I've noticed a tendency to appeal to dictionaries in cases like these. O3000 you might like to look at the definition of "with a vengeance" to understand how (at least in modern English) this is an impersonal expression. A lot of people are having trouble identifying what is and isn't civil these days. I've noticed it seems to depend a lot more on status than on fact. Not sure if that's what happened here, but I thought it was worth providing some expert testimony from a trusted source. -- SashiRolls 🌿 · 🍥 05:48, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
Atsme already changed the wording. O3000 (talk) 14:48, 15 June 2020 (UTC)

OK how about this [[102]]?Slatersteven (talk) 18:25, 15 June 2020 (UTC)

Or [[103]] "Fox altering the images without any disclaimer was “terribly misleading.”".Slatersteven (talk) 11:38, 18 June 2020 (UTC)

Further evidence of recent malign behaviour by Fox News

Comment I came here to point out the self-same doctored fake news story as the one discussed above after having voted (above, option 3) some time ago. The Fox News fake-photo debacle is one of a long line of disgraceful truth-evasion on behalf of Fox's editorial standards. They are the American Sputnik, and I have great difficulty understanding why so many people disagree with/are blind to/ignorant of/overlook this. (Delete as appropriate.) Here, though, is yet another instance of Fox`s child catcher level of nefariousness: described by this article In short, the now-famous recent incident of CNN journalists arrested live on air is twisted by Fox into an attack article on its less far-right competitor by: seeking to bury the wholly self-explanatory video of the incident; using the anchor's script smarmily and baselessly to malign CNN journalists; and, to finish: a heavy dusting of their standard line that "the liberal [non-Fox] media is disobedient/disingenuous/violent/non-white/guilty of unAmerican activities". It is unthinkable that such an organization can be considered a reliable source for anything related to news, politics, America, or anything else important or potentially controversial. And I don't for a minute buy this alleged firewall between their newsroom and their pundits. They choose the pundits, they pay them, broadcast them, and embed their opinions in videos on their news articles of FoxNews.com GPinkerton (talk) 13:09, 14 June 2020 (UTC)

Studies on the reliability of Fox News

General (Fox News)

  • The Fox “News” Lie: Fox's “news” side pushed misinformation every day for four months straight, Media Matters.
  • Fairleigh Dickinson University: What you know depends on whatyou watch:Current events knowledgeacross popular news sources. Found that study participants who watched Fox News we less informed than people who watched no news [104].
  • Nelson, Jacob L. (January 23, 2019). "What is Fox News? Researchers want to know". Columbia Journalism Review.
  • Benkler Y, Faris R and Roberts H (2018) Network Propaganda: Manipulation, Disinformation, and Radicalization in American Politics. Oxford University Press.

Climate change (Fox News)

COVID-19 (Fox News)

"Three serious research efforts have put numerical weight — yes, data-driven evidence — behind what many suspected all along: Americans who relied on Fox News, or similar right-wing sources, were duped as the coronavirus began its deadly spread.
Dangerously duped.
The studies “paint a picture of a media ecosystem that amplifies misinformation, entertains conspiracy theories and discourages audiences from taking concrete steps to protect themselves and others,” wrote my colleague Christopher Ingraham in an analysis last week."
Valjean (talk) 14:54, 1 July 2020 (UTC)

No Go Zone anti-Muslim conspiracy theory (Fox News)

Discussion 2 (Fox News)

  • Comment - I previously hatted this discussion and it was reverted. The reason for my action was because this entire section is irrelevant to the scope of the RfC, and a waste of editors' valuable time. The first source, which is a biased progressive opinion source, briefly mentions the Fox newscast bias, and goes on and on about the Fox News Channel's talk-shows and political commentary that has nothing at all to do with the Fox News Channel's newscasts. Every other source/analysis/poll included after that first source are irrelevant to the RfC because the scope encompasses only the Fox News Channel's political commentary and talk-show pundits, not the newscasts. Hopefully this explanation will save editors from wasting any of their valuable time on off-topic opinions that have no relevance to the RfC. Atsme Talk 📧 03:05, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
    • Given that you've started literally positing a conspiracy against "conservative" sources operating on this page, at this stage you're WP:RIGHTINGGREATWRONGS and probably aren't someone who should be telling anyone else what to post - David Gerard (talk) 15:33, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
      • @David Gerard: I agree. The constant accusations of editorial bias is a personal attack and must be stopped (for some reason the accuser(s) don't realize their own bias can be seen as the reason they are defending Fox News... . How odd! They shouldn't cast stones.):
"Using someone's political affiliations as an ad hominem means of dismissing or discrediting their views, such as accusing them of being left-wing or right-wing, is also forbidden. Editors are allowed to have personal political POV, as long as it does not negatively affect their editing and discussions."
It is the lack of accuracy and pushing of political and scientific pseudoscience, IOW pushing counterfactual content and narratives, that is the reason we don't like Fox News. Hey, someone in the news media has to do this propaganda job (that's the nature of the beast), and instead of leaving this job to the most extreme right-wing sources, Fox News has joined the fray after Trump's rise to power (which happened largely because of them as his propaganda voice). Editorial bias has nothing to do with our opposition to Fox News's inaccuracy. That is their own doing. -- Valjean (talk) 15:48, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
I've stated several times now that I do not consider any of the cable news channels particularly reliable, and though it's completely irrelevant, I'll just mention that my political biases are extremely different from those of Fox News. However, it does appear clear to me that the reason why there is a push to exclude Fox News specifically as a source - as opposed to CNN and MSNBC, which are on a very comparable level of overall reliability and political bias/partisanship - is because the bias that Fox News exhibits does not align with the views of most Wikipedians. Wikipedia should have a consistent policy on reliable sources, which means that either all three major American cable news channels are reliable, or all three are unreliable. Taking an inconsistent, politically biased approach to WP:RS will just serve to tilt articles. -Thucydides411 (talk) 09:34, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
Since you clearly missed the nuance, let me spell it out for you, Fox News has been inaccurate on multiple occasions. They made their platform available to pundits who have been wrong on multiple occasions. I recommend either you read the comments carefully to avoid making blatantly pointless accusations or just not say anything that might be viewed as accusatory. --qedk (t c) 09:56, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
You have to distinguish between opinion (e.g., pundits) and news articles. Politically motivated reporting is not a peculiarity of Fox News, however - CNN recently ran an interview with Susan Rice in which she claimed the violence at protests over the killing of George Floyd might be instigated by Russia: [105]. All three major American cable news channels (Fox News, CNN and MSNBC) are questionable, and should be handled similarly. Treating the news articles on their websites as reliable is a reasonable policy. Opinion articles and opinion shows are definitely not reliable. It would be reasonable to class broadcast news reports on all three channels are unreliable (as opposed to articles on their websites), in my opinion. -Thucydides411 (talk) 17:59, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
Thucydides411, have a quick look at the Ad Fontes chart. https://www.adfontesmedia.com/ - notice that it distinguishes CNN.com from CNN Cable, and Fox News from FNC. We also make this distinction. We distinguish NBC from MSNBC, because, yes, we all know that cable infotainment is not the same as real news.
Fox News (as opposed to FNC) has been considered reliable up to now. What's changed is not us, it's Fox News. It's now rated less reliable and more biased than the Daily Mail.
Fox now blurs the line between its editorial agenda and its news reporting. The canary in the mine was Shep Smith. The doctored images of Seattle were on Fox News, not FNC. Fox has changed. Guy (help!) 16:07, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
What makes Ad Fontes reliable? The doctored images of Seattle were on Fox News. Fox News issued a correction, which is one of the things we look for in reliable sources. -Thucydides411 (talk) 17:51, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
Thucydides411: You've several times repeated your assertion, All three major American cable news channels (Fox News, CNN and MSNBC) are questionable, and should be handled similarly. without giving any reasons or explaining why they should not be differentiated based on the evidence under discussion. Can you give us several examples, instances of Fox making an error biased against Trump and the Right and then issuing a correction? Or is it all the other way -- Right-leaning bias in prime time and then a correction buried elsewhere? Thank you. SPECIFICO talk 18:27, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
Thucydides411, no they did not. They mumbled something about the home-page photos “did not clearly delineate” the splicing together of multiple images from different locations. That's a "sorry we got caught". In a responsible news org, the editor would have been fired or at least disciplined. Guy (help!) 20:26, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
I don't know what you mean by "mumbled." They posted written corrections at the top of the articles and changed the images. -Thucydides411 (talk) 21:05, 16 June 2020 (UTC)

Lets all lay of the PA's, and assume good faith.Slatersteven (talk) 09:59, 16 June 2020 (UTC)

I agree, Slatersteven. Let's stick to the facts as follows: WaPo returned a Pulitzer because of a fabricated story they published, and so did the NYTimes. See this diff for the links to the stories. Why haven't we demoted or even deprecated those 2 sources considering they were actually reporting the news, and not opinion or political analysis? For news & statements of fact, they cannot be trusted after those two major screw-ups. How can we ever trust them again, especially after the past 3 years of them pushing a Russian collusion story - using anonymous sources and unverified material - misleading their readers/audiences - and winning more Pulitizers for getting it wrong? Fox News Channel was one of few who did not promote the Russian collusion story - the talk-shows (political commentary) investigated it and found zero collusion. They got it right and everybody got it wrong. They also got the 2016 election right - but that was analysis/opinion/commentary not news. Shepard Smith was a Fox news anchor and he stated: “The Fox News poll did have President Trump losing the popular vote to Hillary Clinton and the Fox News poll was accurate,” he said. Of course, factually he was accurate because that is what the poll stated, but the polling prediction was wrong. We may not agree with what they're reporting, or their POV, but that doesn't make them unreliable. And yes, they're biased - so are all the others. A Fox News Channel employee recently made a bad decision in art & layout when they used photoshopped images as artwork to depict a scene and enhance a story, and for that you want to demote the entire Fox News Channel as unreliable? How often has ABC screwed up and aired fake photos? And CBS, and on and on. What the broadcast did was actually news. What Fox did was garnishments - art depictions on their website. Deadlines cause mistakes and that is why we should closely adhere to RECENTISM & NOTNEWS. If we had, this would not be an issue because it was quickly removed. No...Fox News is not anymore unreliable than any of the other news channels. Atsme Talk 📧 21:50, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
Your point is fifty long comments now. Many are the same thing rephrased (like propping up instances of center-left journalists who've been wrong, like it's a 1:1 exchange of "bad Cillizza tweet" to "X claims Hillary killed Seth Rich" articles.) There's no reason be so passive aggressive and smarmy. As the OP mentioned, the vote favors Fox News and my understanding is nothing will change. Your criteria is a blank check that performs terribly as a discriminator function, which is part of why others were criticizing you. Thanks to User:Snooganssnoogans for the janitorial work, it's appreciated. Wunderkiwi (talk) 02:28, 17 June 2020 (UTC)
^^^Note to closer: This user has 13 total edits.^^^ Atsme Talk 📧 12:05, 18 June 2020 (UTC)
^^^Note to Atsme: I'm new, I know. That's why I chose not to vote and just left a comment instead.^^^ Please respond to my content rather than my edit count. We've already established that it's simple to rack that number up on talk pages. Wunderkiwi (talk) 01:40, 19 June 2020 (UTC)
Good work on the And you are lynching Negroes argument. This RfC is about Fox News so all you could really do was to prove how other journalistic institutions got it wrong in some instances instead of proving the arguments wrong about how Fox News has diminished in their role as a source of reliable journalism. --qedk (t c) 09:53, 17 June 2020 (UTC)
QEDK, please explain your comment and to whom you've directed it. Atsme Talk 📧 12:05, 18 June 2020 (UTC)
@Atsme: It's very clearly directed at your arguments in the wall of text (which is something you already knew given your talk page posting, so let's not be ingenuine here). There's nothing to explain, I recommend you read the wikilinked page and understand what I was saying, if you still don't, the second sentence of my paragraph is simple enough to explain that kind of argument. --qedk (t c) 12:38, 18 June 2020 (UTC)
I am offended by your comment, or that you would even use such a racist analogy. Fox News Channel is currently rated as a generally reliable source - and until proven otherwise, that is how it stands, and from what I'm seeing in the iVotes, it will remain a generally reliable source whether we like it or not. Your insult and use of lynching is unbecomming an administrator. You should be desysopped for making such a comment on this noticeboard. The sentiment that has been displayed here about conservatives and racist comments like yours do not belong here. I advise you to strike your racist comment. Atsme Talk 📧 12:52, 18 June 2020 (UTC) *Adding references verifying the word "Negro", singular or plural, is considered a racial slur: University World News, Public Opinion Quarterly, AP style, Slate, WaPo, BMJ.21:59, 22 June 2020 (UTC)
I don't think you understand what's racist and what's not, and unfortunately I don't have the time or effort explaining the multitude of levels you're wrong on. I was not the one who came up with this analogy so perhaps you should take it up with Soviet propagandists who did and while you're at it, also understand why I said your argument was fallacious and calling people racist without a) any knowledge of their race or personal life, b) any evidentiary proof that they are racist, is the most offensive aspect about all of this. I'm going to leave this here and you can resume your name-calling if you please. --qedk (t c) 13:01, 18 June 2020 (UTC)
QEDK, I'm not following why you chose to say "Good work on the And you are lynching Negroes argument." "Good work on the Whataboutism argument" would have been less inflammatory. You're saying Atsme made a comment referencing racism on this page? I see references to racism in others' comments but I don't see references in Atsme's. Actually it's inflammatory to reference an article about Russian arguments; no need for denegrating Russians. I think this boils down to an "WP:OTHERSTUFF" argument. wbm1058 (talk) 15:44, 18 June 2020 (UTC)
Answering because you pinged me, @Wbm1058:, I chose to say it because that was the basis of Atsme's argument. Maybe it would have been less colourful (commenting on arguments is not inflammatory) but it would also have been inaccurate, since Atsme's point was a variation of the tu quoque fallacy and borderline whataboutism. Similar to how the Soviets used the terminology to deflect criticism of their own wrongs, Atsme is using the wrongs of other journalistic institutions to deflect criticism of Fox News (which very ironically gives platform to racist pundits) — so no, it was not denigrating Russians either (that is how the catchphrase is used). I never said that Atsme made racist comments, I said that they (implicitly) labeled me a racist, racist comments like yours..., ...advise you to strike your racist comment..., which is again very ironic given my predisposition. I have always tried to comment on the content and not the contributor and in this case, I've also done the same. So to hear that I'm a racist and I made personal attacks, I'm baffled. In any case, Atsme is free to attack me in any way they deem necessary, I don't mind. Good day. --qedk (t c) 17:12, 18 June 2020 (UTC)
QEDK mentioned me in his comment above so for the record, I am replying to his false allegations and masked pretense that I was attacking him or labeling him a racist. Quite frankly, he is not telling the truth as evidenced in this very discussion, and he continued to cast aspersions against me in his reply to Wbm1058. I was going to let it go as of 15:45 on 18 June 2020 (UTC), until I came here this evening and read his appalling accusations about me which he made at 17:12, 18 June 2020 (UTC). What he said in this diff is what started it all, and it speaks volumes. He purposely picked that title and used those words inline to form an integral part of his sentence to me, And you are lynching Negroes; the wikilink simply served as a CYA for him because nothing I've done or said even comes close to what's in that article or his allegations. No - he framed it that way on purpose to imply that I'm racist, and he did it again in his comment above, wherein he obliquely implies that I'm racist for "deflecting criticism of Fox News (which very ironically gives platform to racist pundits)". QEDK is open to recall, and he should be recalled because of his behavior. ArbCom has desysopped admins for less egregious violations of CIVILITY. I have said all I need to say here in my defense against his false accusations and inexcusable behavior as an admin. Editors are welcome to provide further input on my UTP. Atsme Talk 📧 23:10, 21 June 2020 (UTC)
So are you taking it to WP:AN, or somewhere else addressing your wish to get QEDK deadminned? Because WP:RSN is absolutely not the venue for this comment, and your behaviour appears very like an attempt to filibuster this discussion - David Gerard (talk) 23:27, 21 June 2020 (UTC)
@Atsme:, your umbrage is misplaced. Your comments are the first ones that implied racism, with a direct frontal accusation of a racist attack on you, one which did not happen.
@QEDK: is correct when they stated: "I never said that Atsme made racist comments, I said that they (implicitly) labeled me a racist, racist comments like yours..., ...advise you to strike your racist comment...,.." I don't see them making any kind of racist comment or racist accusation against you. They used a famous example of the tu quoque fallacy, which you have been using, and also mentioned "borderline whataboutism", which you also use in your arguments. That was their point, and your response immediately derailed and deflected from their point by implying directly accusing them of accusing you of racism. I don't see it. You need to calm down and retract that accusation. We need less heat here. -- Valjean (talk) 04:29, 22 June 2020 (UTC)
QEDK doesn't want to discuss this on their talk page but they do want to talk about it here, so bring it on. In this edit you congratulated Atsme for her "good work on the And you are lynching Negroes argument." This is a specific type of tu quoque logical fallacy, which attempts to deflect criticism (of Fox News? of Atsme?) by referring to racial discrimination and lynching in the United States. You have congratulated (accused, assuming sarcasm) Atsme of deflection by referring to racial discrimination and/or lynching. I don't think you can point to a diff where she did that. Yes, you said that Atsme (implicitly) labeled something as racist. That's what someone making the "and you are lynching Negroes" argument does. That is what Atsme is very upset about. I'm still trying to assume good faith, that this was just tone-deafness on your part. "Overt racism, foolish racism, or tone deaf racism? Take your pick, it's still racism," (Fox & Friends draws ire). Please commit to never linking to that "and you are..." page ever again in a talk page discussion on Wikipedia. – wbm1058 (talk) 18:35, 22 June 2020 (UTC)
@Wbm1058: Only I get to decide what arguments I use and what I do not, you or anyone else have no right to censor me (read WP:CENSORSHIP). It's offensive enough that you justify editors calling other editors racist (even if implicity) without proof but even more so when you use a public forum to shame me for tone-deafness when in reality, Atsme has repeatedly twisted my actual arguments to suit her agenda. Atsme has no authority to hat comments which oppose her viewpoint and you haven't seen me do the same to stifle her viewpoint, have you? I'm quite sure that if I did so, that would be immediately become a point of contention but it's absolutely fine because Atsme did it. If you don't want to respect other editors, that's fine, just don't play the "racist" card when you don't understand context. I have nothing but utter respect for most editors and this is the sort of thing that stretches that respect. So, I'll be straight with you - just because "you" think something is racist (or any arbitrary opinion) does not mean that's the reality. Similarly, just because Atsme was upset about me quoting a tu qoque catchphrase after she twisted my comment on her content to be an attack on herself - does not mean that's the reality. At any point of time, Atsme is more than welcome to begin a recall process or arbitration case against me instead of accosting me to trial at her talk page. And to be honest with you, I don't even want to discuss this anywhere but if I'm compelled to do so, I will. Best, qedk (t c) 19:05, 22 June 2020 (UTC)
This seems like a quit while you are ahead situation. You don't seem to understand the deeply offensive concerns over what you said. You should of let the situation be defused and kept it under a hat. I suggest you re-hat this before someone else does. PackMecEng (talk) 19:04, 23 June 2020 (UTC)
Since you clearly don't get it, citing a fallacy literally cannot be offensive, and just because the original catchphrase itself contains a word racist in modern contexts does not mean the comment itself can be or should be construed as racist. These are really basic things and just because Atsme twisted the intentions of my words has no bearing on how I meant it, in fact, I have repeatedly stated how the argument was used and how Atsme used it - Wikipedia is not WP:CENSORED ffs. Your definition of "ahead" is even more condescending - because I'm the one who gets attacked repeatedly and somehow I'm also the aggressor who is ahead. And please do hat your own comment (and only yours) since you believe that that is the correct way to defuse a situation, I have no qualms with your approach.   Best, qedk (t c) 17:05, 24 June 2020 (UTC)
Ah yes, the everyone else is wrong and just don't understand me defense. Simple and worthless. Don't do that, it is a bad example for others. Listen, if everyone or even a large portion of people are saying you are wrong, perhaps you could take some introspective and consider their viewpoint and not just assume they do not know what they are talking about. So are you sure you will not reconsider the path you seem hell bend on going down here? You really seem to have an issue understanding what you are doing and why others have such an issue over your comments. PackMecEng (talk) 20:24, 24 June 2020 (UTC)
Ah yes, the everyone else is wrong and just don't understand me defense. Well no, I only said you are wrong.   Again, maybe you're just bad at understanding. In any case, it's absolutely understandable for people to get swayed with Atsme's call to action, I've personally seen people defend her time after time even after she casts accusations and aspersions by truckloads (refer to Awilley's sanction et al.) - so, I don't care about getting chastised by her mates on the wiki. I also totally understand how the argument can be misconstrued, but it cannot be misconstrued after I explain my intent and usage, and the usage of the fallacy thereof, and after my apology for causing her distress. You also realize how quickly this shifted from being about Atsme's comment and more about mine? I wonder how, and no points for guessing the correct answer. You are more than welcome to continue this here but I won't be spending a second more of my time explaining myself to people when they have no intention of listening, so you have a g'day. I'm done. --qedk (t c) 21:10, 24 June 2020 (UTC)
I can understand that, when you are wrong you really only have two choices. Double down or admit you are wrong and try to fix your mistake. It would of just been nice if you went the fixing your mistake route though rather than doubling down on the everyone is wrong but me. Oh well, perhaps it will be a learning experience for you in the future. Have a great day! PackMecEng (talk) 21:23, 24 June 2020 (UTC)
It's not "everyone", only a few allies. Others disagree with you, including myself. If you examine all the diffs, as I have done (just to be sure I didn't miss something), you'll find that there was never anything related to racist accusations on the page until Atsme did it herself and derailed the discussion by her bombshell reaction and essentially implying @QEDK: is a racist. QEDK could not have been accusing Atsme of anything related to racism with that link to the article (thus showing her reaction was unreasonable), and the very wording of QEDK's posting shows that the racial aspect of that article was not QEDK's focus. That is an article, FFS! QEDK was just using it as a well-known example of the same logical fallacy used by Atsme multiple times on this page (tu quoque). That was QEDK's point, and Atsme didn't see it, but took umbrage to it, which was not the right reaction.
Even after explanations by QEDK, myself, and others who understood QEDK's intentions, Atsme, Wbm1058 (who has totally misunderstood what happened), and yourself refuse to AGF. That's not right. Atsme has still not stricken the strong personal attack on QEDK of making "racist comments", IOW strongly implying they are racist. That's just wrong. She should have AGF and not resorted to personal attacks. She is the one who cast aspersions, not QEDK, and the over-the-top calls for desysopping are just beyond ridiculous. Our admins have a tough enough job as it is, without such personal attacks. -- Valjean (talk) 23:53, 24 June 2020 (UTC)
PackMecEng, please drop the stick. This side discussion should be hatted as not helping the discussion. O3000 (talk) 00:11, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
Yeah you are probably right, would you mind hatting it? PackMecEng (talk) 00:13, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
Hah, wouldn't know where to start.  Besides, I'm prob'ly too involved. O3000 (talk) 00:20, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
I'm fine with it being hatted, but @QEDK: should also consent. -- Valjean (talk) 00:55, 25 June 2020 (UTC)

Fox News: reliability in context

In the RfC responses above, the New York Times was invoked several times as something of a 'gold standard' RS. With that in mind, I ask editors to consider a comparison of Fox News with the following:

  • New York Times: we were wrong on Iraq Sources for the Times reporting were the Pentagon and an embedded reporter named Chilabi. From Slate "Because the Times sets the news agenda for the press and the nation, Miller’s reporting had a great impact on the national debate over the wisdom of the Iraq invasion. If she was reliably wrong about Iraq’s WMD, she might have played a major role in encouraging the United States to attack a nation that posed it little threat."
  • The NYT printed a false claim and has not corrected it after 10 months. Per Newslinger "Following up on my correction submission to The New York Times, I have not yet received a response from the NYT, and "Trump Shares Unfounded Fringe Theory About Epstein and Clintons" has not yet been amended". The claim serves to exonerate Clinton from ties to Epstein's island, and in so doing, smears victim Virginia Giuffre as a liar. (And since the recent Netflix special, Giuffre is no longer alone in her allegation.)
  • The NYT printed an inaccurate statement from Joseph Backholm, one of Tara Reade's corroborators, and did not respond to a request for correction. So, if Backholm is interviewed again he can potentially be discredited for having changed his story. The Times (May 31) article has: Joseph Backholm, who said she had told him about an assault by an unnamed senator when they were students together. However, "Backholm says that Times inaccurately reported details he told them ("She didn’t provide any details and didn’t say it was a senator") Backholm texted back to Lerer."*. In a tweet dated May 26, Backholm stated she told me that while working in DC she had been sexually assaulted by "someone you would know."*
  • The NYT stealth edited their investigative piece on the Tara Reade allegation against Joe Biden on behalf of the Biden campaign, removing a caveat from their summary.* According to Fox News, The Times originally reported: "No other allegation about sexual assault surfaced in the course of reporting, nor did any former Biden staff members corroborate any details of Ms. Reade’s allegation. The Times found no pattern of sexual misconduct by Mr. Biden, beyond the hugs, kisses and touching that women previously said made them uncomfortable. The final sentence was removed because the Biden camp "thought the phrasing was awkward", per Ben Smith.*

I have yet to see anything comparable to these examples from Fox News. What am I missing? petrarchan47คุ 22:49, 16 June 2020 (UTC)

Wikipedia:Reliable sources/Noticeboard#Studies on the reliability of Fox News? --Hipal/Ronz (talk) 23:15, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
From what I've observed, editors are saying that Fox corrects their mistakes. Is this not true?
In your list, nothing even remotely compares with fake news that led to a deadly war.petrarchan47คุ 23:32, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
Petrarchan, your emphasis on the WMD and the New York Times seems besides the point. The vast majority of US news outlets, including Fox News, posted uncritical WMD coverage both before and after the invasion of Iraq. What sets the Times apart is that it issued a retraction, not the error itself which was also made by most of its peers. Newimpartial (talk) 23:43, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
All other news based their reporting on the NYT, who got it from 2 sources, one of them was the Pentagon. (Isn't this called propaganda?) "Jack Shafer writes the Press Box column for Slate and he has been calling for a reexamination of Miller’s work for more than a year."* Less than impressive. petrarchan47คุ 03:01, 20 June 2020 (UTC)
I don't agree that I emphasized it, in fact I personally find most egregious the Times lack of response to requests for correction, and the fact that they took editorial advice from the subject of a sexual assault 'investigation'.
Imagine if we discovered Fox News looked into one of the rape allegations against Donald Trump, and that after 19 days of diligent work, concluded that he had a pattern of behaviour worth noting... but then received a call from his office stating that he didn't like the way it sounded, so Fox edited their report exactly as Trump requested. Now imagine that they did this without alerting readers. This is exactly what NYT has done, and I am still waiting for a similar example regarding Fox. petrarchan47คุ 19:09, 19 June 2020 (UTC)
Petrarchan47, they have a correction system in place, but it's used woefully inadequately (see e.g. [106][107][108]) {{u|Sdkb}}talk 16:40, 17 June 2020 (UTC)
Sdkb, thank you for this. "Inadequate" is actually a step up from what I've personally witnessed from the NYT, which is "non-existent". petrarchan47คุ 19:09, 19 June 2020 (UTC)
Read WP:Other stuff exists and drop this. This RfC is about Fox News, not the NYT. {{u|Sdkb}}talk 16:36, 17 June 2020 (UTC)
Sorry, take it to the many folks who've previously invoked the NYT in the RfC above. As I stated, The NYT is being touted unquestioningly as somewhat of a 'gold standard' RS. One good way to gauge the RfC questions is by determining what exactly editors find to be a shining example of good practices, and then compare (in this case) Fox News to it. The NYT comparison is highly relevant. One might even ask, why is this RfC focused on Fox when we have worse, or comparable, behaviour from all similar news sources including the gold standard. petrarchan47คุ 19:09, 19 June 2020 (UTC)
Maybe some people consider NYT a gold standard outlet, but Reuters and Associated Press are better sources imo. I don't think that the NYT's reliability should influence how we rate Fox News or vice versa. buidhe 22:33, 19 June 2020 (UTC)
The only way to evaluate this is in context. At the Biden page, we recently had an RfC where the idea that 'if it isn't printed in the NYT specifically, it can't be added to the page', was used in !votes, and this went unchallenged for the most part. In practice, the NYT is indeed gold standard: the number of times NYT is cited on WP dwarfs that of all other news media ( PDF). If Fox is less problematic and (therefore) more reliable than NYT, then what are we doing here? petrarchan47คุ 02:47, 20 June 2020 (UTC)
  • I think that perhaps part of the hangup is the four levels of reliability offered in the initial post. I certainly don't think that Fox should be deprecated as a source (I have cited to Fox News stories many times myself), and I would agree that a lot of cable news/web news type sources would fall more into category 2 than category 1 in many cases. BD2412 T 22:07, 19 June 2020 (UTC)
Right. But if we are to downgrade any of these sources, we should make sure to look at them all. By default, we are considering only Fox which is dangerous in that, as others have mentioned, they aren't less reliable than their counterparts and they often report stories that literally no other outlet (still considered RS on WP) are covering. The requirement for an additional source would often mean content simply can't be added, resulting in a great disservice to readers and a degradation of the project. petrarchan47คุ 02:47, 20 June 2020 (UTC)
I agree that it should be done across the board because all of them in today's clickbait environment require caution. CNN & MSNBC are among the worst, so if Fox is considered a source to approach with caution, then CNN & MSNBC are a step below that. I have not seen any retractions about their biased innuendos and fictitious conspiracies, not even theories that could be supported - they used unverifiable allegations from anonymous sources nonetheless about Russia-Trump collusion, not to mention the FISA warrants that were questionably obtained, and they did this for at least 2 years. Please, convince me otherwise by showing me the retractions, and I'll consider changing my position. Atsme Talk 📧 17:27, 20 June 2020 (UTC)
Petrarchan, on the WMD, you are presumably aware than in 2005, Fox News watchers were found to be twice as likely to have been misled about the discovery of WMDs in Iraq than those reading print media, and in fact more likely to be so than those taking their news from any other source measured. (source) You don't think that had anything to do with Fox's reporting? Newimpartial (talk) 17:41, 20 June 2020 (UTC)
Uhm, Newimpartial see CISSM, Media Coverage of Weapons of Mass Destruction, the Frontline story (2 parts), and The Intercept. There's plenty of blame to go around. Atsme Talk 📧 23:18, 22 June 2020 (UTC)
My point was not that the NYT didn't disgrace themselves in that instance (they did), but concerning whether Fox News covered itself in glory by contrast (they didn't). Petrarchan was using WMD as an example of how the NYT could not be trusted, in comparison with Fox News, which is a load of high-quality fertilizer if I've ever smelled one (and oh, but I have). Newimpartial (talk) 00:18, 23 June 2020 (UTC)

Clarification requested (Fox News)

This has been raised in passing above, but not clearly answered - what is the scope of this RFC? When we say “Fox News”, what are we referring to? Does it include the news programming of local Fox affiliates (such as WNEW in New York City)? Does it include the Fox Business cable channel (FBN)? What about Fox’s talk radio broadcasting? Or is the RFC limited to just the main cable news station and its associated website? Blueboar (talk) 15:25, 16 June 2020 (UTC)

Local affiliates have separately operated newsrooms, so they're not under this discussion. This is about whether or not the cable news channel's news operations have let their bias undermine the reliability of their news coverage. (I say yes.) oknazevad (talk) 15:43, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
Problem is... it isn’t as clear cut as that. The cable channel will often go to local affiliates for coverage of news events, since the locals have camera crews and reporters on scene. So would that reporting be ok or not? It’s on both local AND cable. Blueboar (talk) 18:17, 16 June 2020 (UTC)
@Blueboar: My main focus when calling the RfC was the parts of the Fox News operation that are citable on Wikipedia, i.e. primarily the website and the main cable channel. I added the affiliate question as a response to quieries, but as Newslinger pointed out above, affiliate stations generally are considered to have a separate reliability to the main news operation, and so I don't consider the RfC a vertict on the reliability of affiliate stations. Hemiauchenia (talk) 15:58, 16 June 2020 (UTC)

I also wish to address here why I opened the RfC in the first place. Ultimately including option 4 was not because I was intent on depreciating Fox News, but that the language I chose was a standard boilerplate that has been used in other RfCs. Generally reliable, unclear / additional considerations apply and generally unreliable is a useful standard for RfC, and provides some nuance in the discussion. It is far better than "should Fox News be depreciated" that had previously been proposed. There is overwhelming concensus in the RfC that Fox News shouldn't be depreciated, which I agree with. I should note that I generally don't edit the American politics area at all (check my edit history), and this wasn't an attempt to attack Fox News, I would be happy to see it retain its generally reliable status. The RfC is about arguments not simply a straight vote, so when the RfC is closed it will be decided based on the strength of arguments, so if the arguments against Fox News are bad (which I agree that some arguments in this RfC against Fox News are), then they will simply be discounted by the panel of closers. I think that this article in the Columbia Journalism Review "What is Fox News? Researchers want to know" in probably the most relevant piece to this RfC. It discusses many issues that have come up in this discussion, including the lack of research on the reporting of Fox News itself as opposed to the pundits. Calling this RfC has been a huge learning experience for me, and maybe doing some kind of pre-RfC that was done for Quackwatch would've been better in hindsight. Thanks for your understanding. Hemiauchenia (talk) 15:58, 16 June 2020 (UTC)

I would break it down with;
  1. FNC (the main cable news channel)
  2. FBN (Fox Business Network - business news and commentary)
  3. Local affiliates (each with a news division)
  4. foxnews.com
These are all interconnected... for example: when a story is breaking, FNC may use local affiliate film crews and reporters to cover it (as they are on scene). That coverage may then get a synopsis posted to foxnews.com. Usually, it is the synopsis on foxnews.com that gets cited on Wikipedia, and not the broadcasted footage. Blueboar (talk) 15:10, 18 June 2020 (UTC)
Local affiliates do lots of in-depth reporting which is never picked up by the main Fox entities either because its niche (most local content is) or because it isn’t “on brand” (most of the affiliates are significantly to the left of Fox News, that doesnt mean they’re left of center it just means they’re center-right or right, Fox News has drifted far-right). We should be using only the in-depth reporting of news organizations, wikipedia isn't for breaking news of the kind you would cut to a local affiliate for an on-the-scene report from. Horse Eye Jack (talk) 20:09, 19 June 2020 (UTC)

Hypothetical consideration on Fox

I've mentioned about NOT#NEWS, RECENTISM, and how, if we waiting for news cycles to pass, how Fox likely would not be used under an UNDUE evaluation. I'd like to propose this idea as a consideration: if we actually waiting on rushing to add information on current event articles for like, say, a week (This is just hypothetical), then after that week, considering all sources that then cover events, how likely would we be using Fox News over other sources per UNDUE, or how likely Fox News (at the national level) is going to provide completely unique factual information that other sources will not have at all?

That is, in the long term development of any article, does Fox provide any unique content that cannot be sourced from other RSes or appropriate under UNDUE?

If that answer to that last question is mostly no: then I could see a completely fair option of saying that Fox News should be considered a source to avoid (not deprecated in the manner of DM) because its bias raises too many questions on reliability and we can wholly replace it with less biased sources that other give the same information, while leaving open for cases where Fox News may provide unique coverage, flagging that its political coverage should be immediately considered potentially tainted by bias.

if that answer is otherwise yes and Fox does have some long-term unique and useful content, then we've got the issue that we need to still consider Fox as an RS. --Masem (t) 18:18, 20 June 2020 (UTC)

Masem, it's a fair point. My preference is always for analytical reporting anyway, rather than blow-by-blow accounts of events as they happen. I suspect that the instances of in-depth analytical reporting cited to Fox is... low. I won't say it never happens, but most of the content appears to be focused on feeding the outrage machine for another hour. Guy (help!) 10:07, 21 June 2020 (UTC)
I'm just looking at an option here that considers how much we actually really need to depend on Fox News as a necessary source that we really need to keep given the mass of difficulty of trying to define what part of it is actually reliable and that everything else tied to it seems to be a sinkhole of bad journalism. I do not want a solution that says "Fox News' newsdesk is not reliable", because that has yet to be shown and all arguments being setup for that will come back against other sources in the future if we're not careful, but we can point to the bias that affects its news reporting and ruins the rest of its "news programming" to the point that if we really don't need to use it because we can use other sources for the same information, then great. Not deprecated, just "source to avoid when possible". --Masem (t) 13:31, 21 June 2020 (UTC)
In other situations regarding low-quality sources, WP takes the strong position that anything notable will be covered in RS, so if your only source is low-quality, then it's not notable. Why not take the same strong position here? In other words, according to this, we never really need to rely on a single questionable source. NightHeron (talk) 13:42, 21 June 2020 (UTC)
I suspect this is how many experienced editors already view Fox. We can't know that they aren't lying to us, except when their reporting is corroborated by more reliable sources, and that makes their use superfluous. I approach them as David Zurawik does Trump: "Let's just assume Trump's always lying and fact check him backward."
When they do have "completely unique factual information," it's often questionable and quickly debunked by more reliable sources, so we also ignore them in such situations. We treat them as a debunked source, but there are editors who do not do that, so we end up wasting lots of time dealing with such attempts because we can't yet just say "don't use Fox News, because a consensus has debunked it. If you want to use it, you'll have to back it up with multiple more reliable sources if you want us to accept your use of it." Such editors are time sinks because they constantly drink the Fox News koolaid and declare it delicious and just as good as other koolaid, while recognizing there is an enormous difference, IOW they prefer the poisoned koolaid. They can't have it both ways (recognize the difference and still declare both types equally good/bad), but they waste our time trying.
An official debunking would save us lots of time and effort in those situations. Most experienced editors already don't trust Fox News as a source for politics and science because Fox News's pushing of climate change denialism and their constant defenses and blind repetitions of Trump's proven lies as if they were fact, are all appalling breaches of everything we require from RS. Such failures flunk them for use as a RS. They fail DUE 99% of the time. -- Valjean (talk) 14:23, 21 June 2020 (UTC)
From a pragmatist's POV, Fox has reported important incidents that others have failed to report, and they have reported correctly when others have not, and that happens more frequently than we care to admit about today's clickbait political arena where news conglomerates & their echo chambers favor one particular party or candidate over another. And it may very well be that it's a candidate in the same party the news conglomerate supports. There is also the fact that we have individual newscasters with different biases or experienced newscasters that conceal their bias, so are we talking about newscasts or pundits? We have to make that distinction as well. Unlike the other cable sources, Fox News has newscasters from both parties, so that would be another consideration if we are using NPOV to guide our choices and we are actually writing for the opponent. It is not so easily cut and dried that we can just go POOF! and eliminate a generally reliable source because of systemic bias or policial POV. It has to be done on a case by case basis. If you believe FoxNews will not be cited often, then why are we even having this discussion? We can easily continue doing it case by case per WP:RS, WP:NOTNEWS, WP:NEWSORG, WP:RENCENTISM. Atsme Talk 📧 15:53, 22 June 2020 (UTC)
Atsme: "Fox has reported important incidents that others have failed to report, and they have reported correctly when others have not." I don't doubt the first part, but can you give some examples that proved to be true, when everyone else was wrong (and everyone else then had to self-correct)? That is directly relevant to Wikipedia and its editors, because we should then alter lots of our articles if we haven't done it already.
The rest of us see the opposite being the case most of the time, and often Fox News does not come around. They just stay silent on the issue. That is their pattern. It's a feature, not a bug. They do it on purpose. They create talking points which all their talking heads and news hosts are required to use, and those talking points are often deceptive. We have seen myriad examples where Fox News was proven wrong by fact-checkers and where they ignored the facts reported by all the other major sources because those facts were inconvenient to their/GOP/Trump's agendas and not good for their base to really understand, thus keeping their base in the dark.
This partially explains why Fox News's viewers have been shown to be the poorest informed news viewers, compared to consumers of RS (and to those who consume no news at all). Fox News's viewers (and Trump) openly attack the most informative and accurate ones, like NPR and Colbert Report, which are rated to have the best-informed viewers, and those two sources constantly debunk the errors and false reporting from Fox News. Colbert uses humor and sarcasm to debunk and inform at the same time. -- Valjean (talk) 16:47, 22 June 2020 (UTC)
This is an important, I agree that there are stories that Fox uniquely picks up, but at the end of the day are they really stories that have long-term use to WP?
Keeping in mind that the mainstream slanted-left sources also frequently jump on stories that they cover broadly but end up going nowhere as well (a lot from earlier in Trump's presidency ), so Fox doing the same would not be a surprise to us. I'd rather see if Fox News (national level, not local stations) pick up on non-political stories that do have long-term value that no one else covers. I cannot at all conceive of any such cases right now, and having this cases would be the only reason to keep Fox as an RS over the weight of the other issues that Fox otherwise creates. Or, as I suggest, as long as we call Fox a source to avoid, not deprecated, and when these unique cases come up, that still allows Fox news to be used where appropriate, but still give strong reason to dismiss Fox in the midst of the most problematic cases of political hot-topics. --Masem (t) 17:15, 22 June 2020 (UTC)
(This to NightHeron's) I wouldn't necessarily classify Fox as "low quality", but the amount of burden that is brought by Fox News as a source, as clearly shown by this RFC, creates so many problems that rather than trying to fairly justify that it is still is an RS by our definition (a point I still contend is true), that it makes it a burdensome source that taints nearly every discussion that it comes into play that for the purposes of minimizing disruption on WP, is better to treat as a source to avoid, leaving wiggle room for reasonable use in unique cases where there's no issue with its presentation of material (read: outside political theater and climate change). Practically, it will be like blacklisting it, but rationally its a different approach to avoid having the arguments to be repeated for "we need to blacklist CNN because they did the same thing as Fox!" except that CNN carries none of the baggage that Fox News has. --Masem (t) 17:24, 22 June 2020 (UTC)
I have never used MSNBC as a source. I have used Fox as a source for articles unrelated to politics (broadly construed). I can find no reason to use them for politics. There are Fox articles that would seem not political, but are. For example, lately they’ve run multiple articles about obscure assaults by blacks unrelated to anything. (Example with expected racist comments[109]) There are about 2,400 aggravated assaults in the US per day (more than one a minute); yet they create entire articles about single such events not covered in other non-local sources. I find it bothersome to use such a source for anything even remotely political. O3000 (talk) 18:19, 22 June 2020 (UTC)
That's exactly the type of extra focus they give that we'd never cover as an encyclopedia. That's the type of articles that Fox covers that may be "true" but never will find a place here. --Masem (t) 18:29, 22 June 2020 (UTC)
There is no source that is totally unreliable, or reliable. In politics, some sources try to search out and highlight everything favorable or unfavorable about their preferred political positions, and will on occasion be the best and most reliable source. The opinion that anything covered by fox is necessarily either false or unimportant is thesort of extraordinary opinion that would need extraordinary evidence, . The view that many of the stories covered by Fox are less than fully reliable, or are relatively trivial , is a much more reasonable statement. There is good ground for caution with any news source I know in in contemporary (or for that matter, historical) American politics; there are especially good grounds for great caution with Fox in current national politics--but this applies much more to their editorial coverage or some of their columns. Readers expect to see information from all sides of an issue at Wikipedia , and if we do not use the best available sources on all sides we are rejecting NPOV, in favor of advocacy. It's a perfectly reasonable proposition that what is called for at these times is in fact advocacy against those positions favored by Fox-- and I would consider it praiseworthy for anyone who feels that way to do what they believe needful--but not in WP.
If they try to do it here, they're harming their own cause: the people who come here to read political articles are often those who do not yet have a firm position, and come here in the hope of finding truly unbiased information based on our reputation for NPOV. If they come, and find we emphasise only one side of a question, they're not likely to have much confidence in anything they see here. DGG ( talk ) 07:27, 23 June 2020 (UTC)
In terms of your last point, WP absolutely sucks in between the combination of our policies, practices and current editor makeup and behavior if one is looking to get NPOV on what the "big picture" is on a given ongoing controversial topic if that topic is in any of the big "ArbCom" areas (AP2, IP, etc.). UNDUE is, IMO, misused to try to capture the mainstream press's stance at the moment and eliminate most other views as fringe, when in actuality, we either shouldn't be covering any of those views in the short-term and wait for long-term retrospectives to give us a way to review with neutrality (the better and much easier solution to implement, which in the case of Fox News here, doesn't require us to keep them around), or we recognize that UNDUE should only be applied to evaluate the long-term presentation of sources, and when we're writing the articles while these controversial topics are ongoing, we need to include many more sources including Fox to provide the wider, more neutral picture. This latter, while more helpful to the reader, is also the route that is going to be rife with so much edit warring and disruption. It's just something WP is not well-suited for. (*assume my usual rant on NOTNEWS/RECENTISM applies here*) --Masem (t) 14:36, 23 June 2020 (UTC)
Well, we have a great example of unique Fox reporting just this week: Fox unearthed an audio recording of Jimmy Kimmel (who's already under fire for wearing blackface) using the N-word six times when he was doing a Snoop Dogg impression. Nothing has really happened just yet, but stuff like that has the potential to ruin a celebrity's career. And if it does, that'd definitely be of long-term relevance when it comes to him. Of course, there's potential this won't amount to anything (and if it's proven that Fox fabricated this, which I consider highly unlikely, then I'd agree we should avoid citing the website), but I just wanted to point this out. EDIT: Kimmel just confirmed it's real. JOEBRO64 15:50, 23 June 2020 (UTC)
National Enquirer may come up with something. So, we wait until an RS publishes. As you have shown, that quickly happened giving us an RS to use. WP:NODEADLINE O3000 (talk) 00:47, 24 June 2020 (UTC)
(edit conflict) The National Enquirer has been first to break a story and turned out to be right multiple times. See 10 Times the National Enquirer Has Been Right: From Michael Jackson to OJ Simpson and 7 Stories The National Enquirer Actually Got Right. That doesn't make it a reliable source. Yes, they were the first to report that Steve Jobs was ill and the first to report that Rush Limbaugh was abusing pain killers, (both correct) but they were also the first to report that in 2016 Hillary Clinton had 6 months to live and the first to report that Prince was diagnosed with AIDS (both bullshit). As Pravda on the Checkout Line points out, "The best propagandists always remember to fold a dash of the plausible into the mix, and here the tabloids excel." When you see something in an unreliable source, you don't know whether it is like the Steve Jobs story or like the Prince story. --Guy Macon (talk) 01:17, 24 June 2020 (UTC)
Guy Macon and Objective3000, comparing Fox to the National Enquirer is a false equivalency. Fox is a legitimate news outlet that broadcasts real (albeit biased) news. The National Enquirer is a supermarket tabloid that publishes anything that will catch someone's eye. If I call the National Enquirer and tell them that Abraham Lincoln faked his death and is actually living it up in Cuba with Tupac and Hitler, then they'll probably publish it. JOEBRO64 12:35, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
You appear to have missed the point. You posted: we have a great example of unique Fox reporting just this week suggesting that as a reason for using Fox. We used National Enqiurer as an example why that’s not a good reason. Actually, it is easier to be first if you are sloppy as you don’t have to take the time to adequately verify. O3000 (talk) 12:47, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
I am not "comparing Fox to the National Enquirer" and I don't believe Objective3000 is either. We addressed the specific invalid argument that, just because sometimes a publication has a scoop that turns out to be correct, that proves that it is a reliable source.
Again I ask, Regarding the images shown at [110], If Fox News is willing to purposely mislead me about where a particular person carrying a gun and wearing a green mask was standing, how can I trust anything else they present to me? (Also see [111] --Guy Macon (talk) 13:10, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
We know that for close to 3 years, Fox got the story right about Russian collusion, and WaPo and the NYTimes went home with Pulitzers...uhm, for getting it wrong? It appears viewers responded unfavorably to the poor news coverage by the big 3, CNN, MSNBC, NYTimes, WaPo and NPR as indicated in this poll. It also demonstrates a stark partisan divide, especially as it relates to FoxNews getting the story right about the Russian collusion theories that were being spread/implied/spun by the other networks in an effort to lock-in their viewers who agreed with the Democrat's POV. The poll shows Republicans stuck with Fox but the credibility ratings for the other networks took a nose dive. It also appears Democrats disliked FoxNews even more for their accurate reporting about the concocted Russian collusion theory, but even their trusted stations took a nosedive. Masem, I'm of the mind that this poll obliquely speaks to your question about Fox exclusives, so I'd say "yes", that it is an important source. As I've said before, we still excercise caution and follow relevant PAGs, keeping in mind they all make mistakes but the sources that retract/correct should be given more weight. I'm calling it a night. Atsme Talk 📧 01:09, 24 June 2020 (UTC)
I know you believe all this from your TP. That's why you have difficulties on AP2 articles. O3000 (talk) 01:13, 24 June 2020 (UTC)
In what universe did Fox "get the story right about Russian collusion?" Some people clearly have an easy time hopping timelines, and I'm stuck in a crappy one with an impeached US president still in office, ceding world leadership to Russia and China while a respiratory virus runs rampant in the Americas and South Asia. How can I get to a timeline with dirigibles and competent political leadership? Newimpartial (talk) 01:49, 24 June 2020 (UTC)
Yeah, I've not at all put any time into trying to follow the Russian interfere story outside of the broad strokes, but even just browsing sources, I'm trying to figure out how "Fox got it right" is there (all current sources have Fox at the center of this web of misinformation to get Trump elected, so...). Even if Fox did get something right, I'll get my NOTNEWS/RECENTISM soapbox out and point out that this is the type of story that in the long run to discuss how the story broke we should be relying on more academic sources like Columbia Journalism Review to know how things fall and who was "right", rather than trying to document at the start, and to that point, Fox again would become less likely as a source, or in my proposed "source to avoid" would still be used if its initial stories were deemed "correct" by scholarly sources. --Masem (t) 01:57, 24 June 2020 (UTC)
@Newimpartial: I can answer that question. (sarcasm alert) Fox News got "the story right" in the Fox News universe misinformation bubble. By contrast, RS apparently got it all wrong "for close to 3 years", and that's why we have articles here that are considered totally wrong because they are based on RS. In what universe does THAT thinking prevail? One that is not based on RS, but on conspiracy theories, such as the one described here: Russia investigation origins counter-narrative (actually a mashup of several conspiracy theories). In THAT universe, that article is wrong, and those conspiracy theories are considered true. It's a universe where the items described at Fox News controversies are considered actual facts, and not debunked nonsense. It's a universe where the fact, reported by RS (not just Fox News), that the FBI made errors in the FISA applications, suddenly invalidates all the proven facts regarding the Trump campaign's collusion/invitation/facilitation/lying/obstruction/favoring-Putin-rather-than-America/aiding-election-interference, etc. are therefore all wrong, did not happen, and are not true (and if true are okay), just because of some errors. Russia didn't interfere in the election, Trump didn't welcome that help, and it had no influence on why he won. That's the thinking in that universe. It's a strange universe, but if one can defend Fox News, one can also believe what's in the Fox News misinformation bubble. -- Valjean (talk) 06:50, 24 June 2020 (UTC)
Masem, *WaPo (op), *The Intercept, *WaPo graphics, New Yorker, *Guardian, *Fox News, *Boston Herald (op-ed), *50 media mistakes, etc. I imagine the Durham report will provide an interesting finale. Atsme Talk 📧 06:52, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
Without spending the hours researching the points, I get the impression from all of this that the statement "Fox was correct" is comparable in this situation to "a broken clock is right twice a day". Simply by disagreeing with the mainstream that there was no collusion - not because they actively took steps to show that but simply by denying the points of their opponents on the opposite side of the political spectrum - they ended up being "right". That's not how I would see Fox News being useful, to my point in this section. --Masem (t) 16:55, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
To Atsme - It seems you've misrepresented the Morning Consult poll that you link. From the poll you linked:
1) Among all adults, Fox News came in below: NYTimes, CNN, ABC, NBC, CBS, and Wall Street Journal,
2) The WaPo is not included in the poll so I don't why you mention it as being part of the poll,
3) The poll does not mention "Russian Collusion" at all (so it's unclear why you mention it as being part of the poll - it's not),
4) The poll shows that, even among GOP, the credibility of Fox News has declined,
5) On Coronavirus coverage, the poll shows that all adults (including GOP adults) distrust Fox News more than any other media listed and evaluate Fox News as having the "poorest" coverage of all media listed.
The Morning Consult attributes the decline in trust to Trump repeating the same lie, "Fake News" over & over & over for 4 years. Trump often repeats the same lies over & over, not just his lies about "Fake News. I will note here that "Repetition is an integral part of brainwashing." [112] Which reminds me that in 2015 Republican President Ronald Reagan's Domestic Policy Adviser Bruce Bartlett published his detailed analysis of Fox News wherein Bartlett concludes Fox News is a "Propaganda Machine." [113] In his analysis, Barlett reports on several studies that found "Fox viewers are misinformed" and are "more likely to have factually untrue beliefs than those who receive their news from mainstream sources." Bartlett says of Fox viewers, "it can almost be called self-brainwashing – many conservatives now refuse to even listen to any news or opinion not vetted through Fox, and to believe whatever appears on it as the gospel truth."
Finally, I notice that you've used questionable sources on this talk page such as: realclearpolitics, huffington post, bes-reporter.com, digitalethics.org, washingtonexaminer, and Fox News talking head Bernard Goldberg - so- I figure it's acceptable for me to include the link to Reagan's domestic policy advisor's analysis of Fox News. BetsyRMadison (talk) 19:23, 24 June 2020 (UTC)
In response to your misinterpretation and wall of text about what I was referring to by linking the poll, that isn't what I said, meant or intended. Try reading it again. Atsme Talk 📧 19:29, 24 June 2020 (UTC)
You posit that Democrats distrust FoxNews because of Fox's "accurate reporting about the concocted Russian collusion theory", which is hyperpartisan flamebait (at best). Can you make at least a token effort to express your views without constant recourse to partisan talking points? They add a lot of heat and no light to the discussion. MastCell Talk 20:13, 24 June 2020 (UTC)
MastCell, in response to your question, I simply explained my views about the Morning Consult poll which demonstrates Democrat distrust in FoxNews. That's no surprise. The graph clearly indicates a partisan divide regarding the credibility of each source. I also just provided multiple sources for Masem that further support my position. You don't have to like it, but nothing I've said was derogatory or intended to be anything beyond what that poll and RS have already demonstrated. Why you singled me out, I don't know, but you wrongfully described my comment as "hyperpartisan flamebait (at best)", and said nothing about the derogatory comment by Valjean in this same discussion when he spoke about WP editors who consider FoxNews a generally RS, and I quote: Such editors are time sinks because they constantly drink the Fox News koolaid and declare it delicious and just as good as other koolaid, while recognizing there is an enormous difference, IOW they prefer the poisoned koolaid. That comment is noncompliant with WP:PA, specifically that "some comments are never acceptable", and the first bullet point states, Abusive, defamatory, or derogatory phrases based on race, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, age, religious or political beliefs,..., (my bold underline). What are you going to say to him? Atsme Talk 📧 09:12, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
To Atsme - Whether intentional or unintentional, your comments on this talk page includes your use of Fox News links (among other links) to push a false narrative (a conspiracy theory) regarding "Russian collusion" by falsely claiming/inferring 'no Russian collusion.' You strike me as an intelligent person, so it is not clear why you intentionally, or unintentionally, push that false narrative - which by its very nature - is a very dangerous & diabolically false narrative.
For example, you sent Masem a Fox News link (here [114]) that pushes that false narrative in-part by blurring, and thus falsely equating, 'collusion' with 'criminal conspiracy.' To be clear: they are not equal - not in law and not in a dictionary. Not only that, but your Fox News link doubles down on spreading misinformation about the Mueller report - and because your Fox News link spreads misinformation & pushes that dangerous, diabolical false narrative - your Fox News link becomes one more example of why Fox News is not a reliable source. 
This is an encyclopedia, not a blog. It makes no difference what individual WP editor's politics are, what they watch on tv, or where they enjoy getting information -- every single WP editor should call-out and reject the intentional or unintentional spreading of false narratives, disinformation, and misinformation that is found anywhere on this wikipedia website.
To be clear: Mueller did find evidence Trump campaign 'colluded' with Russia, several members of Trump campaign pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about their colluding with Russia, Donald Trump Jr colluded with the Russian government via Russian nationals, and Mueller found evidence that Trump campaign "conspired" with Russia. 
  • Russian collusion: The Mueller report describes evidence that confirms, yes, the Trump campaign did 'collude' with Russia.  Mueller spent 200 pages outlining “numerous links between the Russian government and the Trump Campaign" - that's collusion. [115] A few other examples include: several of Trump campaign officials pleaded guilty to "willfully and knowingly" lying to the FBI about their colluding with Russia.[116] [117] [118] And, Donald Trump Jr's emails confirm Donald Trump Jr 'colluded' with Russia and was willing to accept the "Russian Government" offer to give Trump "official High Level Sensitive" that Russian Intelligence gathered "as part of Russia & it's Government's support of Trump" [119]
  • Criminal conspiracy: Mueller investigation found evidence of 'conspiracy' between Trump campaign & Russia just not enough to prosecute on criminal conspiracy.  Regarding criminal conspiracy Mueller wrote “[a] statement that the investigation did not establish particular facts does not mean there was no evidence of those facts.[120] As a side bar: Since you speculate on "Durham" - I'm sure won't mind me speculating here: Because Trump obstructed the Mueller investigation, and because Trump was too afraid to testify under oath, we can only speculate as to whether Mueller would have found enough evidence to prosecute Trump & members of his campaign of "criminal conspiracy."
  • I'd be remiss if I did not mention that, of the Mueller report, even Bill Barr wrote Trump is "not exonerated" and even Barr did not write 'no collusion' [121]
So, given all that, it is not clear why a seemingly intelligent person, such as yourself, would use an encyclopedia talk page to push the false 'no collusion' narrative. BTW: I say "even Bill Barr" because, in Federal court, a federal judge said Bill Barr put forward a “distorted” and “misleading” account of the Mueller report's findings and Bill Barr lacks credibility on the topic. [122]
Once again, The Fox News link you gave to Masem is a Fox News link that pushes a dangerous, diabolically false narrative which makes your Fox News link become one more example of why Fox News is not a reliable source; therefore, your Fox News link is additional evidence that Option 3 and Option 4 best describe Fox News. BetsyRMadison (talk) 17:13, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
Actually, I'd consider what I'm proposing here is a new "Option 5" that none of the other options give: Fox should be avoided, not because it isn't a reliable source (we have yet to find the equivalent of clear evidence that was there for Daily Mail and Breitbart when it comes to what their news desk produces), but its the weight of the bias of everything else the Fox network cover that harms that reliability, to the point that Fox is rarely a source that is needed to uniquely cover a topic in the long term so we can safely avoid it (why I asked this hypothetical). Not deprecation (though still the same type of language from Daily Mail, where it is relevant to the topic at hand) and allowance only when it is a last resort for sourcing information that is deemed essential in a topic's coverage. It's a novel approach , and avoids the future cases that if we had ended up calling Fox unreliable without strong proof and only riding on its bias, then we'd have editors in the future trying to turn those tables on sources like CNN (which does have some bias but which is nowhere close to the baggage that draws its reliability down). --Masem (t) 22:09, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
If we aren't brave enough to actually deprecate Fox News, then this "Option 5" makes sense: "Whenever possible, we should avoid using anything from Fox News." This will also send a signal to Fox News to get their act together. -- Valjean (talk) 02:08, 26 June 2020 (UTC)

My Quick Two Cents (about Fox News)

I didn't know this discussion was ongoing or I would have spoke up sooner. Before I start, I am a hard left-leaning, registered Independent, support just about everything the Dems do and say, and loathe Fox News and Trump in every. way. That said, I can do say this neutrally....

Anyway, for anything below a "class C", it might be OK. I would have a backing, secondary reference just in case. Some of their news articles do have a "slant", while some do not. Even if the organization is considered reliable, I would still recommend editors have backing, secondary references on anything they source from Fox News. For any articles that are "Class A" and up (ie: GA and FA), I would not use it. We are going for the best of the best and we demand the best sources. That said, I do have an FA under my belt that uses Fox News as a source for the soul reason as I can't find what I need sourced anywhere else. That was actually a point of contention for one of the reviewers during the FAN. They weren't thrilled with the Fox News source.

So, in short (ie: TL;DR) "class C" rated articles and below, for me it's OK, but there should be a backing, secondary reference. "Class A" and up (including GA and FA), it shouldn't be used. Just my two cents...and my opinion (and you know what they say about those). :) - NeutralhomerTalk • 00:23 on June 27, 2020 (UTC) • #StayAtHome#BlackLivesMatter

What smart people who are not me say about Fox News

(Because Wikipedia is based on sources, not opinions)

  • A.J. Bauer, Visiting Assistant Professor of Media, Culture, and Communication at NYU, contrasts “esteemed outlets like the New York Times” with “an outlet (Fox) with dubious ethical standards and loose commitments to empirical reality.”[48]
  • Yochai Benkler, Law Professor at Harvard Law School and co-director of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University: “Fox’s most important role since the election has been to keep Trump supporters in line,” offering narratives of the "deep state", "immigrant invastion" and "the media as the enemy of the people".[49] On the supposed "symmetric polarization" in media, Benkler says: “It’s not the right versus the left, it’s the right versus the rest.”[49]
  • Christopher Browning, Professor Emeritus of History at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill: “In Trump’s presidency, [propaganda has] effectively been privatized in the form of Fox News... Fox faithfully trumpets the “alternative facts” of the Trump version of events, and in turn Trump frequently finds inspiration for his tweets and fantasy-filled statements from his daily monitoring of Fox commentators and his late-night phone calls with Hannity. The result is the creation of a "Trump bubble" for his base to inhabit that is unrecognizable to viewers of PBS, CNN, and MSNBC and readers of The Washington Post and The New York Times.”[50]
  • Lauren Feldman, Associate Professor of Journalism and Media Studies at Rutgers University: “While MSNBC is certainly partisan and traffics in outrage and opinion, its reporting—even on its prime-time talk shows—has a much clearer relationship with facts than does coverage on Fox.”[48]
  • Andy Guess, Assistant Professor of Politics and Public affairs at Princeton University: “There’s no doubt that primetime hosts on Fox News are increasingly comfortable trafficking in conspiracy theories and open appeals to nativism, which is a major difference from its liberal counterparts.”[48]
  • Nicole Hemmer, Assistant Professor of Presidential Studies at the University of Virginia: “It’s the closest we’ve come to having state TV... Fox is not just taking the temperature of the base—it’s raising the temperature. It’s a radicalization model. [For both Trump and Fox] fear is a business strategy—it keeps people watching.”[49]
  • Daniel Kreiss, Associate Professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's School of Media and Journalism: “Fox’s appeal lies in the network’s willingness to explicitly entwine reporting and opinion in the service of Republican, and white identity.”[51]
  • Patrick C. Meirick, director of the Political Communication Center at the University of Oklahoma, states in a study of the "death panel" myth that “...rather than polarize perceptions as predicted, Fox News exposure contributed to a mainstreaming of (mistaken) beliefs.”[26]
  • Reece Peck, Assistant Professor at the College of Staten Island - City University of New York, characterizes Fox as political, "comedically ridiculous" and "unprofessional".[48]
  • Joe Peyronnin, Associate Professor of Journalism, Media Studies, and Public Relations at Hofstra University: “I’ve never seen anything like it before... It’s as if the President had his own press organization. It’s not healthy.”[49] “No news channel reported on Obama being from Kenya more than Fox, and not being an American. No news channel more went after Obama’s transcript from Harvard or Occidental College. Part of mobilizing a voting populace is to scare the hell out of them... I heard things on Fox that I would never hear on any other channel.”[52]
  • Jay Rosen, Associate Professor of Journalism at NYU and former member of the Wikimedia Foundation Advisory Board: “We have to state it from both sides. There's been a merger between Fox News and the Trump government. The two objects have become one. It's true that Fox is a propaganda network. But it's also true that the Trump government is a cable channel. With nukes.”[53]
  • Steven White, Assistant Prof. of Political Science at Syracuse University: “Political scientists are generally not massive Fox News fans, but in our efforts to come across as relatively unbiased, I actually think we downplay the extent to which it is a force for the absolute worst impulses of racism, illiberalism, and extremism in American society.”[54]
  • Jen Psaki, former White House Communications Director: “The peddling of dangerous conspiracy theories is not just a Chris Farrell or a Lou Dobbs problem. This is a Fox in the age of President Donald Trump problem... And it is one that could not only do lasting damage to the legitimacy of media in the US, but could also spur more anger, division and even violence in the short term.”[30]
  • Blair Levin, Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution and former FCC chief of staff: “Fox’s great insight wasn’t necessarily that there was a great desire for a conservative point of view... The genius was seeing that there’s an attraction to fear-based, anger-based politics that has to do with class and race... Fox News’ fundamental business model is driving fear.”[49]
  • Jerry Taylor, President of the Niskanen Center: “In a hypothetical world without Fox News, if President Trump were to be hit hard by the Mueller report, it would be the end of him. But, with Fox News covering his back with the Republican base, he has a fighting chance, because he has something no other President in American history has ever had at his disposal—a servile propaganda operation.”[49]
  • Carl Cameron, former Fox News Chief Political Correspondent: “Fox News' 24 hour news wheel is down to really the Bret Baier show... Most of the rest is predominantly talk [that is] predominantly supportive of a president who is violating all kinds of American values, laws, rules, precedents, etc., etc., and the American people need to hear that... otherwise, it's just propaganda...”[55]
  • Alisyn Camerota, former Fox News host: “When I worked at Fox, sharia law was one of their favorite bogeymen. Roger Ailes was very exercised about sharia law, and so we did a lot of segments on sharia law. None of them were fact-based or they didn’t – there was no emphasis on them being fact based.”[52]
  • Bill Kristol, former editor of The Weekly Standard: “It’s changed a lot. Before, it was conservative, but it wasn’t crazy. Now it’s just propaganda.”[49]
  • Ralph Peters, former Fox News analyst: “In my view, Fox has degenerated from providing a legitimate and much-needed outlet for conservative voices to a mere propaganda machine for a destructive and ethically ruinous administration...[Fox News anchors] dismiss facts and empirical reality to launch profoundly dishonest assaults on the F.B.I., the Justice Department, the courts, the intelligence community (in which I served) and, not least, a model public servant and genuine war hero such as Robert Mueller.”[56]
  • Simon Rosenberg, former Fox News commentator: “It was always clear that this wasn’t just another news organization, but when Ailes departed, and Trump was elected, the network changed. They became more combative, and started treating me like an enemy, not an opponent... It’s as if the on-air talent at Fox now have two masters—the White House and the audience. [Because of this] Fox is no longer conservative—it’s anti-democratic.”[49]
  • Jennifer Rubin, political commentator at the Washington Post: “[Fox is] simply a mouthpiece for the President, repeating what the President says, no matter how false or contradictory.”[49]
  • Greg Sargent, political commentator at the Washington Post: “Fox News is fundamentally in the business of spreading disinformation, as opposed to conservative reportage.”[57]
  • Andrew Sullivan, political commentator at The Atlantic: “The point is surely that the only "liberals" allowed on Fox News are the ones designed to buttress the "conservative" worldview... Just as important [and] what's needed on Fox - and what you'll never see - is solid conservative attacks on and critiques of other conservatives, on matters of principle or policy. That's the difference between an opinion channel and a propaganda channel.”[58]
  • Margaret Sullivan, media columnist at the Washington Post: “Everyone ought to see [Fox News] for what it is: Not a normal news organization with inevitable screw-ups, flaws and commercial interests, which sometimes fail to serve the public interest. But a shameless propaganda outfit, which makes billions of dollars a year as it chips away at the core democratic values we ought to hold dear: truth, accountability and the rule of law.”[59]

François Robere (talk) 16:25, 25 June 2020 (UTC)

Wow! Thank you for posting that information. BetsyRMadison (talk) 21:09, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
The closer(s) must be careful considering this info. This is cherry-picking everything bad said about Fox News. There might be opinions on the contrary, as well, and for the most part these refer to Fox's talk/opinion part, not their news part. ProcrastinatingReader (talk) 23:10, 26 June 2020 (UTC)
"Might" be opinions to the contrary? You're accusing me of "cherry picking" based on hypothetical evidence?
As for your other claim, it's pretty clear from quotes referring to the "Fox News network" that they aren't referring just to the its "talk/opinion part". In fact, some explicitly reject this false dichotomy, like Jay Rosen from NYU: "The only people left who think there's actually a "news side" of Fox may be the handful of people at Fox whose self-image is as a journalist rather than warrior against the liberal media. They're not capable of doing much, but what they can do is introduce cognitive dissonance."[60] François Robere (talk) 03:28, 27 June 2020 (UTC)

This post started out so well with the opening parenthetical comment

Because Wikipedia is based on sources, not opinions

Unfortunately, it was followed by a number of selected… opinions. Why shouldn't this whole section be hatted as irrelevant to the discussion?S Philbrick(Talk) 19:08, 28 June 2020 (UTC)

An opinion in a reliable source is reliable. It's how we gain insight into everything that has ever happened in history - through the opinion of someone who witnessed it, or was told about it. Koncorde (talk) 19:32, 28 June 2020 (UTC)
I agree with Sphilbrick that it needs to be hatted and so do a lot of other off-topic/unrelated/irrelevant discussions throughout this RfC. I've lost track of where the actual RfC begins and ends. It makes cellphone scrolling nearly impossible. Per the RfC statement (my bold underline): Which of the following best describes the reliability of the reporting of Fox News? (as separate from their cable pundits) foxnews.com It clearly excludes the talking heads and pundits. Atsme Talk 📧 21:53, 28 June 2020 (UTC)
Koncorde, I'm puzzled by your comment. We can find many examples of opinions expressed as opinions in Wikipedia articles. However, this is an RFC about whether Fox News qualifies as a reliable source. It has been stated multiple times above that one must distinguish the news division from the punditry, and I don't think a single person has disagreed with that notion. I saw the parenthetical remark as supporting that distinction, which I expected to be followed by facts, not opinions, so I remain puzzled by the relevance of a long list of opinions. Yes, we do have opinions in Wikipedia articles but that's not the subject of this RFC. S Philbrick(Talk) 22:42, 28 June 2020 (UTC)
I don't think it's that confusing. Your comment seemed to be alluding that these opinions are just opinions, not sources, and therefore somehow of no significance and relevance just because they are "opinions". Now you seem to be conceding we have opinions in articles establishing their relevance. It can be best summed up as: Why are these sources only opinions, in your opinion? Koncorde (talk) 23:53, 28 June 2020 (UTC)
Koncorde, Opinions, properly identified as opinions, often have a valid place in an article. This isn't an article. This is an RFC, which is an attempt to determine whether Fox News meets our standard for for a reliable source. That assessment ought to be based on facts, not opinions. S Philbrick(Talk) 12:32, 29 June 2020 (UTC)

@Koncorde: and @Sphilbrick:, let's parse this so it makes sense. The real meaning of "Because Wikipedia is based on sources, not opinions" is more likely referring to "editorial opinions", as in the "opinion" of the poster @François Robere:. Let's see if that's what he meant.

Our reliable sources include facts and opinions, and the opinions are often more enlightening than bare facts, so, as long as they are attributed properly, they should be used and often given as much, or sometimes more, priority than the bare facts, often because facts alone stand without context, and the opinions describe the context and connect the dots properly. The opinions are often the setting that allows the rough diamond to gain luster and shine, demonstrating the true importance of what appears to be a dirty stone on the ground. -- Valjean (talk) 04:23, 29 June 2020 (UTC)

The sources and quotes should definitely not be hatted, as they are important evidence for editors to ponder. -- Valjean (talk) 04:25, 29 June 2020 (UTC)

@Valjean: Thank you for the ping. That is very much correct: is String Theory a potential theory of everything? How did the Battle of Trafalgar affect the British Royal Navy? Was Babe Ruth the greatest baseball player ever? These are all questions that we answer based on expert assessment (or expert opinion, if you prefer) - in line with WP:RS. Whether or not François Robere thinks Babe Ruth was the greatest Baseball player to ever live bears little on what Wikipedia should say; but if the Sporting News editorial board says it, then that's a different matter altogether. The same applies here: lest reliable sources are consulted on the veracity of Fox News, we're to decide based on nothing but our vanity. François Robere (talk) 12:28, 29 June 2020 (UTC)
The only major issue on most of these opinions at the end of the day is that they aren't distinguishing between the Fox News desk and the whole of Fox - which again, maybe is something we have to recognize is near impossible for us to be able to do. No matter how much editorial control and proper fact checking that the Fox news desk does to qualify as an RS, the weight that the other 90% of the network that it lugs behind it has reason to find a solution that addresses that problem. --Masem (t) 13:13, 29 June 2020 (UTC)
@Masem: On the contrary - the problem is that we do. If the vast majority of RS view FN as a coherent corporate and media entity, why don't Wikipedians? Do we know something about FN that they don't?
No matter how much editorial control and proper fact checking that the Fox news desk does to qualify as an RS, the weight that the other 90% of the network that it lugs behind it The fact of the matter is that the news desks at FN don't pull their weight in front of the opinions desk. They host them, but they don't "fact check" them; they appear on their shows, but they don't tell the truth. Some of them routinely spread misinformation. Shep Smith, one of just two honest journalists who routinely confronted "prime time" hosts, was forced to resign. François Robere (talk) 15:05, 29 June 2020 (UTC)
Because we aren't doing that for CNN or any other RS that also has opinion shows or the like. (See last section below about starting an RFC for CNN and MSNBC). If we want to start hanging the bias of the non-news opinion shows on the news side of any organization as a regular part of judging the RS, that will immediately change the way we use a lot of RSes, as I will agree that CNN's clear liberal bias would make its news side questionable if we took that into account (but we clearly don't). We don't judge CNN because of its talk shows but of the quality of its news desk shows, and the same for Fox. But I am all for trying to find a route (as I've identified in my Hypothetical section) that we also never have to use Fox in the long term because it rarely offers anything unique itself (in contrast to CNN which does to its own investigative work), and thus we can deem it a source to avoid (not deprecate) and thus not have to worry about accounting for the weight of all that bias baggage the news side has to struggle with. --Masem (t) 15:23, 29 June 2020 (UTC)
Because we aren't doing that for CNN or any other RS Aren't we? We don't have two separate entries each for CNN, NBC or Bloomberg like we do for Fox, because they're considered "generally reliable" - not "specifically reliable", or "reliable with caveats", but "generally reliable". That's why I'd have no problem whatsoever citing Jake Tapper or Anderson Cooper for facts, even though they're "opinion hosts"; because unlike Sean Hannity and Tucker Carlson - they don't lie. FN hosts are the only ones that we explicitly admit lie. François Robere (talk) 15:54, 29 June 2020 (UTC)
We don't presently but what I feared might happen is what the section about calling for an RFC on CNN and MSNBC alludes to and gets back to this point. As soon as you talk about the bias in any outlet of a source as a determining factor (as has been argued strongly for here in Fox) for reliability, you open the door for these others, which are known to have strong biases that make some of their opinion program unusable for facts. It is not that they lie, but they exaggerate or make hand-waiving claims that are not backed up by the same quality of reporting that their newsdesk reports are given. They are nowhere close to the blatent lies of DM or the FUD of Fox News' opinion shows, but they are biased opinion that we should not quote as fact, and *insert soapbox on NOTNEWS/RECENTISM* stuff we avoid in the short term as opinion. But I definitely would not put any of CNNs/MSNBC's opinion shows' bias as an issue that affects the impression of their news reporting. Bias has always been acceptable for an RS, just that it does make us ask tough questions about it. --Masem (t) 19:07, 29 June 2020 (UTC)
  1. So what? They're still distinct media entities, not collections of departments. Each has one editorial hierarchy, one management, one ownership structure. Why treat them as if they're anything but? If your local transportation authority published the right schedules only half the time, you'd consider the entire organization less reliable. Yes, you'd make various distinctions like "the info boards are accurate, the website isn't", but you'd still consider the organization less reliable for it. It's the same thing here.
  2. As an aside, I'm somewhat flabbergasted by the fact that a source that's "only acceptable half the time" is somehow acceptable in an encyclopedia. I'd expect our sourcing standards to be a bit higher, say >95% accurate.
  3. As for "bias" and "hand waiving" - again, this isn't it. What we're talking about here is lying, distraction and politicization.[123][124] It's a whole different ballpark. François Robere (talk) 12:56, 30 June 2020 (UTC)

A question to Fox's Friends

Continuing on the discussion with Masem above: two defences of "Fox" recur in this discussion:

  1. That "everybody lies", ie that "Fox" isn't different from any other outlet. This claim has been thoroughly debunked by sources spread throughout this discussion, as well as on my own "Fox" page.
  2. That "only Fox's 'opinions' hosts are bad", while its news is decent. That too has been debunked (see eg. BetsyRMadison's comments in the "responses" section); however, the question still holds: why shouldn't Fox's "opinions" project on its "news"?

Opinion writers in any respectable outlet take their role very seriously (see eg. WaPo's opinion writers). They research. They fact check. They do not lie. When NYT published an op-ed by Tom Cotton that was factually wrong, they retracted it and apologized.[125] In fact - NYT is so thorough in its corrections, that it even corrects recipes.[126] But on "Fox News", hosts like Sean Hannity, Tucker Carlson and Brian Kilmeade lie with impunity, and even participate in political campaigns.[127] Functioning editorial controls make this sort of behaviors virtually impossible in any other news outlet. Why? Because at the top of every editorial hierarchy there's a publisher, editor-in-chief and executive editors, who are tasked with making sure the machine as a whole runs smoothly. After NYT retracted Cotton's op-ed, publisher A. G. Sulzberger replaced opinions editor James Bennet - a "rising" star, who according to some sources was due to inherit Dean Baquet as editor-in-chief.[128] If Fox News had a functioning editorial hierarchy, it would've done the same long ago; but they haven't, because they don't. François Robere (talk) 17:11, 29 June 2020 (UTC)

Once again on point #2, I'd summarize all that to call that "journalistic ethics", with the NYTimes known to the primo example of what that is supposed to be. Everyone knows and agrees with that. But that is not a requirement for a reliable source on WP. We are looking for editorial control. That if they make a mistake they do correct it in a reasonable and timely manner. Do we expect them to put to task the writer that made the mistake, especially if it was one so big? No, not at all. What we probably don't want is a cavalcade of mistake after mistake that we have to start guessing if every article could have a problem error in it - eg loss of editorial control. That's clearly not happening here. If we want "journalistic ethics" to be a requirement for RSes, we could have an RS to do that, but that's going to nix a LOT of usable RS across the board completely. There may be areas, like in AP2 or in dealing with BLPs in the AP2 region, that journalistic ethics need to be a key part of the RSes (so that we're not including random rumors) but it wouldn't fly for all sources across all topics. --Masem (t) 19:13, 29 June 2020 (UTC)
Masem, editorial controls are there to enforce ethics. Striving for accuracy is an ethic.[129][130][131] François Robere (talk) 12:56, 30 June 2020 (UTC)
That may be an external metric, but we don't use the concepts of journalistic ethics, only that there's editorial control. Implicitly, the higher quality sources we consider are those that also tend to also have the highest journalistic ethics but since not all of the sources we use are those that would use journalistic ethics (eg scientific journals), its an impractical standard to apply across the board. --Masem (t) 20:18, 5 July 2020 (UTC)
There's some mental gymnastics. That is not "an external metric", that's core to the business. But let's frame this in Wiki-terms, for your delight: per WP:NEWSORG, "signals that a news organization engages in fact-checking and has a reputation for accuracy are the publication of corrections and disclosures of conflicts of interest."
  1. "News organization", not "news department" or "news desk". Fox is an organization.
  2. "Engages in fact checking" - lots of evidence around this thread that they often publish without FC.
  3. "Has a reputation for accuracy" - ???
  4. "Publication of corrections" - sometimes, rarely with an admission of guilt (see more on that on my sandbox page)
  5. "Disclosures of conflicts of interest" - Wait, what? Ethics? Here? (PS this is something Fox failed miserably at with Hannity[132])
Notice how we use neither the term "ethics" nor "editorial controls", but we imply and associate both to outlets' reliability. François Robere (talk) 12:17, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
François Robere, What on earth is the point of your first entry? The New York Times is an organization, but we distinguish between the reporting functions and the opinion functions. Forbes is an organization, but we distinguish between the articles written by the reporting staff and contributed material. I won't be surprised if this distinction applies to virtually all organizations, so again, what point you're trying to make? S Philbrick(Talk) 17:40, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
Policy does not distinguish between reporting and opinion functions, it distinguishes between reporting and opinion content.[61] Reputation is still considered on an organizational[62] and individual[63] levels. If one opts for a literal interpretation of policy as Masem did, one simply cannot ignore the fact that Policy does not allow this sort of organizational dissection. If you want to claim that Fox News is nothing more than a collection of subdivisions with wildly varying policies and reputations, and no unified code of conduct, then the onus is on you to prove it. François Robere (talk) 18:59, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
Yes we definitely distinguish for all sources news and opinion statements. An op-ed in the NYTimes is considered less reliable than a news story. See WP:NEWSORG : Editorial commentary, analysis and opinion pieces, whether written by the editors of the publication (editorials) or outside authors (op-eds) are reliable primary sources for statements attributed to that editor or author, but are rarely reliable for statements of fact. But if you want to go that way, then I would immediately have to say we need to eliminate CNN and MSNBC and CBS and ABC as their op-ed shows are very much biased in the same manner and pose a problem for the organization (which, no, I am no going to go), as well as the fact that the Fox affiliations, part of the Fox organization also need to be nixed. Remember that policies are not meant to be read to the letter like laws, they're a matter of practice. Nearly everyone in this discussion seems to recognize Fox has a news desk that is less problematic and its talking heads/opinions side that is fire and brimstone that we want to avoid at all cost, and it that near association that's causing concern about using the news desk. But we need to make sure that a decision to restrict the use of Fox's news desk is presented correctly as to not trigger the same problems that one can logically argue are also there with CNN and any other network/agency with both news and op-ed sides. It's why NEWSORG is written to be based on the context of the article within the organization, and not as just by the organization. --Masem (t) 19:25, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Read again. The policy discusses individual pieces (stories, articles etc.), not organizational subdivisions. We are not in a position to judge the internal structures of news organizations, only to review them from the outside. We can judge shows, individuals and organizations, but to judge desks you'd need to show evidence that they have distinct policies and reputations. You haven't.
  • Regarding bias, I'll quote Valjean: The bias of a news source is not a reason to oppose its use, but extreme bias does affect accuracy, and that is of concern... Extreme bias, be it right-wing or left-wing, always sacrifices accuracy and reliability. CNN, MSNBC, etc. may have bias, but they still stay close to what is factual. If you can show this not to be true, I'll support their removal as well. Otherwise I don't see how your fear of a wave of RfCs will materialize.
  • Remember that policies are not meant to be read to the letter like laws Exactly, which is why I found it amazing you stuck to a literal interpretation of Policy to argue Wikipedia doesn't care about journalistic ethics (which it obviously does).
  • Nearly everyone in this discussion seems to recognize Fox has a news desk that is less problematic First - no? Second - we're an encyclopaedia (!!!), we shouldn't rely on anything less than excellent. François Robere (talk) 09:32, 7 July 2020 (UTC)
  • NEWSORG implicitly distinguishes op-ed departments from news departments within a singular organization, and has been held that way in practice across all sources. We have never judged any other RS by the accuracy or lack of bias in their op-eds, though I certainly would agree that a work that routinely contains off-the-rail op-eds and similar opinions is a problem. And yes, extreme bias is a problem, but I will stress that the Fox news desk in this discussion has yet to be shown to have that same extreme bias as the opinion side of the network. They have a clear bias - they try to support Trump and the GOP, attack the Democrats, and still weakly hold onto a denial of climate change as has been shown but that affects the tone of what they write and not the accuracy on the news side, which we have yet to show anything like the silver bullet that was for deprecating the the Daily Mail in terms of outright fabrication in news reporting. CNN + others have similar tonal issues in their news reporting but from the opposite side in terms of attacking Trump/etc. (and not as from from middle as Fox News is) which is standard for reporting nowadays outside of the most neutral sources (NYtimes and BBC). So again, while we can talk of the Fox News desk purportly being so biased to be unreliable, that just hasn't been show. Its why any reasoning to eliminate Fox News solely on this basis is going to bite us because people will use that to try to remove CNN etc.
  • Its why I've stressed my so called option #5, in which we recognize in the long run, Fox News rarely brings anything to WP that no other reliable source already does, or where it would not be necessary under UNDUE in the long term, as to avoid all the issues that Fox News other wise brings due to its association with the rest of the network and its extreme bias and chicanery. It serves your goal to use the best sources available recognizing that Fox News' newsdesk simply can't be called a "best source" while the rest of its house is a mess even if it was delivering the best news out there. Its threading the needle so that these arguments can't mirror and apply to CNN or other similar left-leaning sources with strong opinions. --Masem (t) 13:11, 7 July 2020 (UTC)

References (Fox News)

Collapsed because these are references primarily to political pundits, like Sean Hannity on Fox News Channel, not Fox News. GQ headline reads Fox News Was Duped by a Seth Rich Conspiracy Pushed by Russian Intelligence. Fox News retracted the story from their news section but pundit Hannity continued. Atsme Talk 📧 18:42, 13 June 2020 (UTC)

What's the point of viewing Fox News in isolation? They are the ones who provide the platform to people like Sean Hannity and hence they should be treated as the same entity, or atleast related. "Not Fox News" is an incorrect conclusion. --qedk (t c) 16:36, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
Well, probably because this RfC is about Fox News which is separate from the Fox News Channel's talk-show commentary: Which of the following best describes the reliability of the reporting of Fox News? (as separate from their cable pundits) foxnews.com. It appears this RfC may have wasted a significant amount of our valuable time arguing with those editors who conflated the two and did not distinguish between factual newscasts by Fox News anchors and the channel's political talk-shows. I was concerned about that issue from the very beginning, and mentioned it to Newslinger. I'm afraid you may have just validated the reason for my concern. Atsme Talk 📧 20:12, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
It was a drawn implication, hence I clarified my vote in each aspect of reliability, my point is simply to correct the notion of Fox News and pundits being separate entities when they function in conjunction. --qedk (t c) 20:48, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
Atsme How are they separate? What other news organizations are only reliable at certain times of day? Do we have to specifically disbar "pundits" (regular employees, not mere guests) with other news outlets? Where do we disqualify such content under the BBC's head? GPinkerton (talk) 22:48, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
Hi, GPinkerton - please see my sidebar note which follows my iVote in the RfC iVoting segment above. The scope of this RfC is strictly the newscasts, not the talk show entertainment on the Fox News Channel - two entirely different things. Think of it as you would an ABC broadcast on channel 8A which includes daytime & primetime talk shows, movies, series, and then there is "the news". Also, a few questions were added below the original RfC a day later, and should not be considered part of the actual RfC. I do hope editors have not been confused by it. Atsme Talk 📧 23:08, 14 June 2020 (UTC)
Also... (not Atsme’s point, but worth noting)... there is an analogy to print journalism, where we draw a distinction between the “op-Ed” (opinion) pages and other (news) sections of the paper. We can equate stuff like Hannity’s show to the op-Ed page. Blueboar (talk) 21:57, 15 June 2020 (UTC)
See below. François Robere (talk) 11:00, 3 July 2020 (UTC)

Just to clarify, the {{sources-talk}} template above captures citations in everyone's comments from this RfC, including comments posted after the ones above. — Newslinger talk 10:27, 17 June 2020 (UTC)

References

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  45. ^ Joyella, Mark (2020-01-28). "'We Passed CNN...And Never Looked Back': Fox News Hits 18 Years At #1". Forbes. Retrieved 2020-06-14.
  46. ^ "Fox News' best-ever ratings signify that we are a country divided". Poynter. 2020-04-29. Retrieved 2020-06-14.
  47. ^ Hamborg, Felix; Donnay, Karsten; Gipp, Bela (2018-11-16). "Automated identification of media bias in news articles: an interdisciplinary literature review". International Journal on Digital Libraries. 20 (4). Springer Science and Business Media LLC: 391–415. doi:10.1007/s00799-018-0261-y. ISSN 1432-5012.
  48. ^ a b c d Nelson, Jacob L. (2019-01-23). "What is Fox News? Researchers want to know". Columbia Journalism Review.
  49. ^ a b c d e f g h i Mayer, Jane (2019-03-04). "The Making of the Fox News White House". New Yorker. ISSN 0028-792X.
  50. ^ Browning, Christopher R. (2018-10-25). "The Suffocation of Democracy". New York Review of Books. ISSN 0028-7504. Archived from the original on January 1, 2020. Retrieved 2019-03-08. {{cite news}}: |archive-date= / |archive-url= timestamp mismatch; December 31, 2030 suggested (help)
  51. ^ Kreiss, Daniel (2018-03-16). "The Media Are about Identity, Not Information". In Boczkowski, Pablo J.; Papacharissi, Zizi (eds.). Trump and the media. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. ISBN 9780262037969. OCLC 1022982253.
  52. ^ a b Siddiqui, Sabrina (2019-03-19). "Fox News: how an anti-Obama fringe set the stage for Trump". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2019-04-21.
  53. ^ Jay Rosen [@jayrosen_nyu] (2019-03-04). "We have to state it from both sides. There's been a merger between Fox News and the Trump government" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  54. ^ Steven White [@notstevenwhite] (2018-10-28). "Political scientists are generally not massive Fox News fans..." (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  55. ^ Jensen, Erin (2019-10-14). "Fox News alum Carl Cameron worried Shepard Smith's exit could turn channel into 'propaganda'". USA Today. Retrieved 2019-10-22.
  56. ^ Grynbaum, Michael M. (2018-03-20). "Fox News Analyst Quits, Calling Network a 'Propaganda Machine'". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2019-04-19.
  57. ^ Sargent, Greg (2018-03-06). "In stiff-arming Fox News, Democrats get one big thing right". Washington Post. Retrieved 2019-04-19.
  58. ^ Sullivan, Andrew (2010-10-26). "Should Liberals Appear On Fox News?". The Atlantic.
  59. ^ Sullivan, Margaret (2019-03-07). "It's time — high time — to take Fox News's destructive role in America seriously". Washington Post. Archived from the original on January 1, 2020. Retrieved 2019-03-08. {{cite news}}: |archive-date= / |archive-url= timestamp mismatch; December 31, 2030 suggested (help)
  60. ^ Jay Rosen [@@jayrosen_nyu] (2019-11-16). "The only people left who think there's actually a "news side" of Fox may be the handful of people at Fox whose self-image is as a journalist rather than warrior against the liberal media. They're not capable of doing much, but what they can do is introduce congitive dissonance" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  61. ^ WP:NEWSORG: "News sources often contain both factual content and opinion content", "news reporting", "editorial commentary, analysis and opinion pieces"
  62. ^ WP:NEWSORG: "well-established news outlets", "less-established outlets", "newspapers", "news agencies", "publication", "news organizations"
  63. ^ WP:NEWSORG: "When taking information from opinion content, the identity of the author may help determine reliability. The opinions of specialists and recognized experts are more likely to be reliable and to reflect a significant viewpoint."

Call for close (Fox News)

The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.


I say that we should all stop posting about Fox News, put is a request at WP:AN for an experienced and uninvolved admin to evaluate the consensus and post a closing summary, and get on with our lives. Everything that needs to be said has been said, and another 10,000 words will not change the result. If the participants are unwilling to wind this up, I ask that an uninvoled experienced editor move this to a seperate sunpage so that I can unwatch it without unwatching the rest of the noticeboard. --Guy Macon (talk) 08:13, 25 June 2020 (UTC)

I agree with Newslinger a panel should be mandatory for a decision with significant consequences, and possibly potential news coverage. Hemiauchenia (talk) 21:07, 25 June 2020 (UTC)

The whole RFC is defective. The 4 options did not include the most plausible answer which is that the options all invalid over-generalizations, as is any attempt to do so for something as huge and diverse as Fox. North8000 (talk) 13:43, 25 June 2020 (UTC)

I agree with North 8000 regarding close concern and if just 4 options are a good idea with such a large and complex discussion. I would also add a question, how has the ambiguity regarding how Fox News should be treated negatively impacted Wikipedia thus far? That is, what actual problem are we solving? What is gained by changing the status quo? Do we have examples where somehow a story that Fox ran has resulted in a Wikipedia article saying something that later had to be changed as it was found to be false? If something Fox News says is controversial what are the odds that talk page discussions will find the information is DUE? It really comes across as editors trying to restrict use of a source not because it has been show to harm Wikipedia but because they don't like the source. I'm not claiming they don't have just cause to dislike it but that doesn't mean treating it as a RS has thus far hurt Wikipedia. Springee (talk) 16:24, 25 June 2020 (UTC)

The harm is complete inconsistency in following our RS policy by creating a special walled garden exclusively for Fox News, one in which it gets a protected status in spite of failing all our criteria that describe a RS. Fox News has no clothes, but we refuse to say it out loud. That inconsistency places a blessing on a truly bad source. All other sources with such a horrible track record get demoted drastically. In practice, we generally only use it as a last resort, choosing to use RS when possible, but without a mandate from this RS board for that unofficial deprecated status. We recognize it's unreliable, but refuse to say the words out loud. That's bizarre. @Masem: has waxed eloquent on this point.
We have one group of editors who defend it because they believe that the false and deceptive opinions on Fox News are true facts, and thus see it as on a par with all other major networks, so they use the tu quoque fallacy to defend it as being equally bad as other sources. Another group of editors sees its false opinions for what they are, and see that they are being treated as facts by the network, thus blurring the line between facts and opinions, a situation so at odds with what we require of all other RS that we would fail any other network which did this.
The fact that occasional factual reporting does occur at Fox News is not seen by the latter group as justification for keeping the Fox News dungheap in the same courtyard with the other major networks, just because one can dig through the dung and find occasional factual pearls which are scorned by Fox News. Those pearls can be found on the surface, clean, untainted, and presented as facts in the reporting of all other mainstream sources. Fox News treats unfavorable facts as garbage, unlike other sources which treat facts as facts.
If a source is unreliable, it should not get a special status in a walled garden. We treated Trump that way for far too long, refusing to label his proven and egregious lies as "lies", just because some mainstream sources were reluctant to do it. Now we can say, in Wikipedia's voice, that he is a profligate liar without equal in modern political life, and we can say it in Wikipedia's voice because all RS do it every single day. The evidence is overwhelming. Trump is no longer in a walled garden where Wikipedia pretends his lies are exceptional and minor faults. They are not.
We should do the same with Fox News and end this official hypocrisy which fails to honor the demands of our RS policy. If a source is unreliable, then it should be openly declared to be unreliable. Break down the walls of the Fox News Walled Garden. -- Valjean (talk) 19:36, 25 June 2020 (UTC)

I would agree time to close, we are not really having any fresh input just the same arguments made by the same people. All the evidence is in (well for now), so lets just have a decision.Slatersteven (talk) 19:58, 25 June 2020 (UTC)

  • This is more of a note to the closer(s) as I have not much time be heavily involved in this discussion. It seems to be most of the evidence shown as to how Fox News (website and regular newcasts) is allegedly unreliable is actually evidence that talk shows on Fox News (Tucker Carlson Tonight, Hannity, Fox & Friends) are unreliable. I think the core part of this discussion is how to differentiate between the different parts of Fox News. Yes their website may make a mistake, of which are rare, but this sometimes happens even with the most reputable reports (something noted at WP:NEWSORG, and Fox does issue corrections which further indicates reliablity). Regards  Spy-cicle💥  Talk? 21:08, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
    @Spy-cicle: ...is actually evidence that talk shows... That seems to be a narrative put forth in favor of treating Fox News as reliable, but I see no evidence supporting it. --Hipal/Ronz (talk) 22:46, 25 June 2020 (UTC)
    Here's an example provided in the above discussion ([133]). For the sake of argument let's assume it a reliable source which is a big assumption given that at least two of the four sources have conflicts of interest with their organisations. It states Fox [...] now functions basically as a propaganda arm of the Republican Party. These poor, generalised statement are unhelpful. Are the talk shows (like Tucker Carlson Tonight) propaganda? Is the regular news reporting propaganda? Is the website propaganda? Are the local affiliates propaganda? Is Fox Corporation propaganda? These types of generalising statements without specifically differentiting between the different parts of Fox News are littered in a lot of the above sources. I mean if that source seriously thinks that the local affiliates of Fox News are propaganda I do not know what to tell you. Regards  Spy-cicle💥  Talk? 21:43, 28 June 2020 (UTC)
    Spy-cicle, there are no bright lines between the reporting and the "propaganda". That's the problem. We can't have endless discussions on article talk pages to decide whether a particular citation is RS. And there are too many editors who come to WP mistaking the nonsense for valid reporting. And then too, there are the shows that report the truth but not the whole truth and nothing but the truth, further confusing partisan editors and talk page discussions. If we cannot rely on a source to be reliable, then it's not reliable. Editors are not coming here with our limited volunteer time to have pointless arguments with obstinate and uninformed colleagues. Such editors are a small minority among editors but they account for at least half the talk page text in politics articles. SPECIFICO talk 22:07, 28 June 2020 (UTC)

To the criticsms of Springee and North8000, the four options are merely guidelines to aid the closers for what the concensus for the discussion is, ulimately the language of the closer should be based on arguments presented. In another comment I said I regretted not workshopping a RfC as was done for Quackwatch, but I am not sure ultimately that would have worked any better. Hemiauchenia (talk) 21:07, 25 June 2020 (UTC)

The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

Also CNN & MSNBC

I hope the same kinda Rfc has been opened up, concerning CNN & MSNBC news a sources. As much as Fox news is pro-Republican, CNN & MSNBC news are pro-Democrat. GoodDay (talk) 14:23, 27 June 2020 (UTC)

Lets end this one first, whataboutsim is not a valid argument.Slatersteven (talk) 14:42, 27 June 2020 (UTC)
Agreed. Indeed, this transparent and facile attempt is false equivalency at its worst. oknazevad (talk) 16:08, 27 June 2020 (UTC)
Actually most sources agree that's not the case. FN is generally seen as being in its own category, far and away from other outlets,[134] with a level of partisanship hitherto unheard of.[135] What's more, several studies show that FN viewers are less informed than any other network's, in one case even less than people who don't watch news at all (links here). François Robere (talk) 15:26, 27 June 2020 (UTC)
I think it would be fantastic, really great, absolutely yuge if we could get that fake news outlet of CNN banned! We will build a wall, it will be a big beautiful wall to keep out all their fake news from Wikipedia and CNN will pay for the wall! In all seriousness though, this is almost a non-starter. We know CNN has a left wing political bias same as Fox has a right wing one. All media outlets have one. If anyone's making up real fake news, it's ABC. The C of E God Save the Queen! (talk) 15:56, 27 June 2020 (UTC)
All corporate-sponsored news media have a bias. Manufacturing consent on behalf of their sponsors, is common practice. GoodDay (talk) 16:08, 27 June 2020 (UTC)
@GoodDay: Yes, but do they present facts? FN routinely doesn't to a much greater degree than anyone else. François Robere (talk) 17:08, 27 June 2020 (UTC)
Ya can't split hairs. All those news networks aren't totally honest. GoodDay (talk) 17:11, 27 June 2020 (UTC)
Whether a news network manufactures news or not isn't "splitting hairs". François Robere (talk) 18:39, 27 June 2020 (UTC)
Is there a source for the statement "Manufacturing consent (sic) on behalf of their sponsors" since that is not what news outlets do. MarnetteD|Talk 17:13, 27 June 2020 (UTC)
@The C of E: Actually in most studies I've seen CNN is taken as the middle grounds between FN and MSNBC. That ideological orientation is also reflected in the explicit goals of the networks - CNN was founded as an unpartisan (as opposed to "nonpartisan") 24/7 news network; FN was founded as a conservative outlet; and MSNBC was founded as a contra to Fox. So if you want to make the comparison, it's MSNBC to Fox, not CNN to Fox - though MSNBC is still considered fact-based, while FN isn't (see quotes above). François Robere (talk) 17:08, 27 June 2020 (UTC)
I agree with you. If Fox is depreciated based on its bias than CNN could be equally depreciated as they a both biased.  Spy-cicle💥  Talk? 20:59, 28 June 2020 (UTC)
I would also support the initiation of an RfC on this question, with the same options as this one, plus a fifth option to treat these sources equally. I would just wait until this one is closed, so that we would know what that fifth option entails. BD2412 T 22:13, 28 June 2020 (UTC)
I would agree CNN pre-2017 was more neutral/in the middle between FoxNews and MSNBC, however after Trump's election that is unfortunately no longer the case (especially CNN's ample coverage of debunked conspiracy theories like Trump/Russia collusion). Yodabyte (talk) 23:33, 28 June 2020 (UTC)
There was nothing “debunked” and it’s not a conspiracy theory no matter how many right wingers repeat that ... Fox News fake news talking point. Volunteer Marek 04:21, 29 June 2020 (UTC)
Yes it has been 100% debunked. No charges were brought against Trump or anyone in his campaign after an exhaustive 3 year long investigation (summer 2016 FBI investigation begins-spring 2019 Mueller report completion). Other charges were brought but zero charges for collusion or conspiracy with Russia, so by definition the collusion conspiracy theory peddled by CNN, MSNBC, WAPO, NYT, etc, has been officially debunked. Several prominent liberal journalists (including Glenn Greenwald and Matt Taibbi) have documented this fact, not exactly "right-wingers".Yodabyte (talk) 07:40, 29 June 2020 (UTC)
I'm not sure what was "debunked", but it's clear that "at least 17 Trump associates had contacts with Russians or Wikileaks... at least 100 face-to-face interactions, phone calls or electronic messages with Russians or Kremlin-linked figures and at least 51 individual communications... three Trump associates have now admitted lying about these encounters," and that "the special counsel has indicted more than 30 people, including four members of Mr Trump's campaign team or administration, an adviser and long-time ally, and 26 Russians, as well as three Russian companies."[136] The report itself states that "If we had confidence after a thorough investigation of the facts that the president clearly did not commit obstruction of justice, we would so state. Based on the facts and the applicable legal standards, however, we are unable to reach that judgment."[137] François Robere (talk) 06:27, 1 July 2020 (UTC)
And this is why I was cautioning against any decision about disallowing Fox News strictly on a bias basis without proving out an issue with it being a reliable source or other factors, because you get people asking these questions that clearly don't make in context of why Fox News is being discussed. --Masem (t) 05:16, 29 June 2020 (UTC)
I'd suggest that RfCs on both CNN and MSNBC be launched once this is closed, if only to determine how we should treat their use particularly in the field of American politics. I'm not sure what exactly happened, but CNN (even the international version, which is what I watch) seems to have become more political and more-American centric over the last few years. Perhaps whenever Fox/CNN/MSNBC are used as sources in American politics topics they should be attributed. Narutolovehinata5 tccsdnew 09:37, 29 June 2020 (UTC)
Yeah, except Fox just shouldn't be used at all. It fails the "reputation for accuracy and fact checking" requirement of our WP:RS policy. In fact, it's kind of a textbook example of a major media outlet that does the opposite (there's of course lots of examples of smaller media that also fail it). Volunteer Marek 18:38, 2 July 2020 (UTC)
Volunteer Marek, Please don't make assertions without evidence. I know there are a number of anecdotes in this RFC, some of which document errors by the news division, but a handful of errors do not remotely qualify as failing a "reputation for accuracy and fact checking". If that was all it took, we wouldn't have any sources qualifying as RS. S Philbrick(Talk) 13:49, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
The "anecdotes" in this RfC go far beyond just a "handful of errors" but rather show a systematic pattern which 100% supports my claim that Fox does NOT have a reputation for fact checking and accuracy. They are far worse than many other sources.
I disagree, but there's not much point on discussing this further without a metric. one potential metric is to count the number of news reports produced, then count the number in which a verifiable and uncorrected error exists. However, even if that metric were used, we don't have a useful comparison. Our standard for RS doesn't hint at a measurable metric. I don't know how many news reports have come out of Fox News but I assume it's in the tens of thousands. Even if every anecdote in this RFC reported an actual failure, it's not obvious that this would be enough, and just about every anecdote I've looked at is flawed – either making an accurate identification of a flaw, but talking about a pundit rather than a news reporter, or just flat out wrong. I'm sure there are some. I'm sure there are many. However, that's not the standard for demoting a source as an RS.--S Philbrick(Talk) 15:12, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
CNN & MSNBC are worst than FOX, but I think MSNBC was already demoted. Those 2 networks combined barely equal Fox News ratings, and that's with the recent surge of viewers because of COVID-19. They were in a a slump in the summer-fall of 2019. CJR and Poynter provided some insight. Atsme Talk 📧 01:12, 3 July 2020 (UTC)
Ratings don't mean squat for reliability. And did you actually read the Poynter piece? Because it exactly calls out Fox as out of touch with reality and pushing false narratives. oknazevad (talk) 03:38, 3 July 2020 (UTC)
Atsme, this is just completely wrong. Ratings /= reliability, and this has been pointed out repeatedly before so please stop it with the WP:TEND behavior. Washington Times, btw, isn't all that reliable either. Also, you have a link to where "MSNBC was demoted"? Volunteer Marek 14:15, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
Volunteer Marek, I totally agree that "Ratings /= reliability". I don't think that was what Atsme was intending to suggest, but as I don't understand why this irrelevant factoid was mentioned I will let that editor respond. S Philbrick(Talk) 15:07, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
If ratings are to be the metric by which we rate reliablity, then Game of Thrones and NFL Football should be our guidling lights. O3000 (talk) 14:24, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
Atsme, the high ratings of Fox are why its bias is such a huge problem, and why it has been the subject of substantial scholarly analysis. Guy (help!) 14:32, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
I understand your POV, I just don't agree with it based on my long-standing career experience, although I remain open-minded and will make proper adjustments if I am convinced by fact-based arguments in an apples to apples comparison rather than opinions published in politically biased sources, by biased academics and/or when there are financial conflicts of interest which include, for example, academic funding, competitors and advocacies. I consider viewers to comprise consensus and that consensus is validated by ratings which reflects what the majority of viewers watch...and leading for 18 consecutive years is darn good reason. It tells us viewers consider them more trustworthy than the other networks in that department - and I've said, there is a mix of left & right in Fox reporting. Guy, you already admitted that you don't watch Fox News Channel, so let's not pretend that you know all there is to know about its programming. What I've seen in your responses is political bias, intentional or otherwise, and you're a stand-up enough guy that you don't deny it. Attempts to rate an entire network based on a handful of errors is ludicrous at best, and I certainly hope the 3 chosen closers will see through it. It will be interesting to see the arguments for and against some of the other news networks which have been the worst offenders in news reporting. The latter includes online news publications as well. Fox has never won a Pulitzer but they never had to return one, either. Atsme Talk 📧 15:37, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
You are of course free to disagree but this isn't "my POV", it's actual Wikipedia policy. We DON'T judge reliability of sources based on ratings, full stop, end of story, that's it. If you feel otherwise, and you follow this alternative practice then that brings up clear issues of WP:NOTHERE. It's also disingenuous to pretend to be "open minded" and consider "fact-based arguments", while... in the very next phrase dismissing all possible sources that would disagree with you out of hand.
This is a pointless discussion. You either accept Wikipedia's policy on RS or you don't. If you do, then you don't bring up ratings or other nonsense into it. Volunteer Marek 18:34, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
I can't help but wonder if other sources (CNN for example) were subjected to the same level of scrutiny and the same level of "assume the worst" if they would look just as bad. A catch 22 with the high ratings is it means many of the things Fox covers would have quite a bit of weight since "the highest rated news source" covered them. As someone who doesn't follow FN much looking at this, it looks like Fox is being targeted as much for being willing to deliver commentary that disagrees with others as it is for any actual accuracy issues. Look at the example of "inaccuracies" reported in the section below and most take quite a bit of mental gymnastics to reach their conclusions. I will again ask, how has having Fox News listed as generally reliable ever hurt Wikipedia? Which articles were damaged by this? A counter argument to that question has been "That isn't a criteria for WP:RS". That is true but consider the alternative. Externally calling Fox unreliable will be clearly viewed by some as a partisan action and a case where the wolves outnumbered the sheep while voting on what's for dinner. That will not be good for Wikipedia. If we can't say how treating Fox as reliable has hurt Wikipedia then it seems clear this is more about silencing those who we dislike vs anything else. Springee (talk) 14:52, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
I don't know if it will be "good for Wikipedia" or not. Depends what you mean by that. Will it be good for the perception of Wikipedia? Among some folks, not others. But who cares. Will it be "good for Wikipedia" in terms of content quality? Yes, yes it will. And at the end of the day that's all that matters. Not whether some asshole windbag with a youtube channel talks shit about us because we deprecated Fox News, but whether deprecating Fox News improves the encyclopedia. And I think a strong argument has been made that it would. Volunteer Marek 18:37, 6 July 2020 (UTC)

Fox News pushing misinformation about George Floyd protests

There are numerous articles at Media Matters about Fox News pushing misinformation about the George Floyd protests:

The cases mentioned in these stories are about Fox's actual news coverage (for example, on America's News Headquarters or Fox News @ Night), not opinion shows (although subsequent coverage on opinion shows is often discussed). Given the evidence, I would support not relying on Fox News as a reliable source for information about the George Floyd protests, Antifa, or Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone. Kaldari (talk) 18:58, 1 July 2020 (UTC)

Media Matters is a highly partisan source (especially when it comes to Fox, which they despise with a burning passion) and is not considered reliable at WP:RSP. Also, from what I looked most of the examples they cite are from the opinion shows. JOEBRO64 19:56, 1 July 2020 (UTC)
@TheJoebro64: it is not true that they are "not considered reliable at WP:RSP": "There is no consensus on the reliability of Media Matters for America. As a biased or opinionated source, their statements should be attributed."
There is no decision, likely because, in spite of their mission (partisanship), they remain accurate. When debunking lies is your mission, you are "highly partisan" with a "burning passion", and your work is the truth, so they qualify as a RS. They have the same mission as fact-checkers, which we consider the most reliable sources of all. Media Matters remains accurate when they are debunking the lies pushed by Fox News. We favor that type of partisan source, but we do attribute it.
I don't know why we have to keep repeating this, but bias is not a reason to deprecate a source. It is only when the bias is so extreme that it negatively affects reliability and accuracy that we deprecate a source. If they are still telling the truth, they are considered a RS, regardless of their bias.
On the exceptional occasions a couple of its news anchors tell truths that are contrary to the mission and agenda of Fox News, the whole network makes fun of its own anchors who dare to do that. That tells you that, with rare exception, Fox News cannot be trusted. Since Fox News generally does not tell the truth and constantly pushes pseudo-journalism and false narratives, we should deprecate it.-- Valjean (talk) 14:38, 5 July 2020 (UTC)
Kaldari, I picked one of the entries at random, to see if it stood up to inspection. It doesn't. I picked the second one "Fox News still pushing false police claim of Seattle protester violence — even after the police retracted it". To start with, the headline asserts a false claim of "violence", but that word is used exactly once, in the headline. Not a single mention in the body of the article. While extortion is a serious charge, and can involve a threat of violence, it is not, in itself, violence. So the headline is false. If they were to amend the headline to talk about a false claim of extortion, it would still be wrong. The article includes a quote from Assistant Police Chief Deanna Nollette. The police later retracted the claim, and as the article notes "Steve Doocy did at that point mention the police chief’s retraction..." To summarize, the MediaMatters headline is false (and ought to impugn MediaMatters as a reliable source), the police did claim there were extortion attempts, which Fox reported, and the police did retract the claim, which Fox reported. How on earth is this an example of irresponsible reporting? (Other than by Media Matters) S Philbrick(Talk) 13:29, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
@Sphilbrick: By June 11th afternoon the claim of extortion has been rescinded by police, but on June 12 "America’s Newsroom" was still displaying a chyron claiming armed guards and threats of extortion. Note at least a couple of outlets made attempts at verifying the claim before it was rescinded, rather than just repeating it; Fox hasn't. Also on the show, a commentator suggests "Antifa" presence and decries NYT story "that's almost a travel brochure for Antifa." François Robere (talk) 15:18, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
François Robere, Well, we are making progress. You didn't dispute my observation that the headline mentioning "violence" was not supported by the article. In other words, the main claim by MM is demostrably false. You didn't dispute that Fox reported the rescinding of the claim about extortion and you are left with arguing that they didn't change their chyron soon enough. That's pretty thin gruel. S Philbrick(Talk) 18:46, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
  1. @Sphilbrick: No I didn't, but it's a small error compared to a major new organ repeating a defunct and defamatory claim without even having tried to verify it independently.
  2. If you're concerned with headlines' veracity, would you care to discuss those of Fox? ATM their website brandishes tabloid-like photo overlays like "how could this happen?", "get used to it" and "doubling down" in all caps.
  3. Remember we're not hashing MM's reliability here (especially not based on "a number of anecdotes", to quote a previous comment of), we're hashing Fox's; and for Fox we have whole collections. François Robere (talk) 09:07, 7 July 2020 (UTC)
François Robere,
  1. You asserted, without proof, that they repeated it without attempting to verify it indenpendetly. Unless you have inside access to Fox News, you couldn't possibly know this.
  2. Nice try at changing the subject. If you are willing to concede that MM got this wrong, we can move on to other subjects.
  3. Maybe we should be reviewing MM's veracity. Just about everything I've looked at indicates they have a terrible track record, but we are here to discuss Fox, and MM was used in an attempt to demonstrate problems with Fox, and instead it is boomeranging on MM. S Philbrick(Talk) 12:35, 7 July 2020 (UTC)
@Sphilbrick:
  1. I'll rephrase: Fox's account does not hint at any attempt of independently verifying the claim, as other outlets mentioned by MM have done.
  2. "Change the subject"? I thought Fox was the subject. I've addressed MM's headline in my previous message; will you address Fox's?
  3. I've just conducted a short review of MM myself. As it turns out, they've been cited by papers of record and news agencies from multiple English-speaking countries,[138][139][140][141][142][143][144][145] and the book "The Fox Effect" (co-authored by two MM associates)[1] has been cited 47 times since publication. Overall, they seem to be reliable enough to discuss.
    1. That said, since I don't actually care for their commentary as much as I do for their links - which we can, and have verified ourselves - discussing their reliability is redundant.
    2. Also, since they're just one of several dozen sources, I don't actually care if you take a good swing at them, as long as you make a good effort at the others as well.
François Robere (talk) 13:36, 7 July 2020 (UTC)
Kaldari, I took a look at the next item on the list, the one with the headline "Fox News' coverage of police brutality protests is a conspiratorial, fact-averse mess". while it wouldn't be hard to poke holes in their "analysis", there is no need. The discussion is about talking heads, i.e. pundits on Fox stations not Fox news. This RFC is about the news division not the purveyors of opinion.
Your list of articles had nineeight entries. I looked at two and found them wanting. One talks about the news division but doesn't back up its claim, the other talks about pundits and makes the common error of conflating pundits with news reporters. (One might hope an organization dedicated to the media would know the difference.) I don't have time to go through all of the entries. Can you tell me which one you consider the best one? (Of course, a single example of flawed reporting doesn't remotely disqualify a source as an RS, but I would like to know if there are some real examples.) S Philbrick(Talk) 13:55, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
@Sphilbrick: Martha MacCallum is mentioned as failing to question gov. official on "anarchist" movement membership, and for an apologetic tone on police violence; Bret Baier is noted as lying about "Antifa" stocking up bricks and flammables to fight the police, and Lara Logan is said to have fallen for three separate online hoaxs. There are also links to other articles on problematic presentation of the Lafayette Square incident by various newscasters (note this particular incident was covered very differently by virtually all other mainstream outlets, regardless of political orientation).[146][147] François Robere (talk) 15:41, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
François Robere, I'm not quite following your post. I had noted that Kaldari Link to eight news articles. I reviewed two and found both of them flawed, and rather than go through some of the others only to learn that Kaldari felt that one was particularly telling, I decided to ask which one was the most solid. Obviously, this is not a private forum between that editor and me; anyone can share their thoughts on which of those items is particularly noteworthy, including you, so I initially thought you were picking one of those news items but you included some text and some links, and based on my cursory review, the text has nothing to do with the links provided by Kaldari or by you, and the links have nothing to do with the links provided by Kaldari. I'm guessing you are attempting to respond to my parenthetical query about flawed reporting, but can you clarify your point? S Philbrick(Talk) 19:27, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
@Sphilbrick: You wrote that you took a look at the next item on the list, the one with the headline "Fox News' coverage of police brutality protests is a conspiratorial, fact-averse mess", and that it does not mention Fox's news reporters, only its "talking heads". That is incorrect - the item mentions Martha MacCallum (news anchor and host), Bret Baier (chief political correspondent and host) and Lara Logan (investigative reporter). François Robere (talk) 09:42, 7 July 2020 (UTC)
François Robere, Fair enough that some straight news reportes were mentioned. I'm sure you will agree that the article is mainly about Hannity, Ingraham, Gutfeld, Williams and other talking heads, which suggests that Media Matter doesn't even understand the distinction between punditry and news. S Philbrick(Talk) 12:28, 7 July 2020 (UTC)
@Sphilbrick: "Understand" or "agree"? Per Jay Rosen, Associate Professor of Journalism at NYU and former member of the Wikimedia Foundation Advisory Board, “The only people left who think there's actually a "news side" of Fox may be the handful of people at Fox whose self-image is as a journalist rather than warrior against the liberal media. They're not capable of doing much, but what they can do is introduce cognitive dissonance.”[2] François Robere (talk) 12:49, 7 July 2020 (UTC)
François Robere, Sorry, I gave you a chance but I'm giving up on you. I pointed out that a MM headline made reference to violence while not mentioning it in the body. I asked you to at least concede that fact and you change the subject. I pointed out that another MM article purports to talk about Fox news but mostly talked about pundits. Instead of conceding that MM blundered, you try again to change the subject. I'm not good at nailing Jell-O to a wall so I'm going to move on. S Philbrick(Talk) 12:57, 7 July 2020 (UTC)
@Sphilbrick: You're mixing two threads discussing two different pieces. Re-read your messages to Kaldari. François Robere (talk) 13:41, 7 July 2020 (UTC)

Fox News crops Donald Trump out of Jeffrey Epstein photo

 
(François Robere (talk) 16:09, 6 July 2020 (UTC))

This is from the NEWS department, not the talking heads. This is Leland Vittert Correspondent and anchor:

Valjean (talk) 19:55, 5 July 2020 (UTC)

That's a selective choice of cropping showing bias but it is NOT falsification or the like as argued in the Seattle Free Zone photo manipulation. --Masem (t) 20:07, 5 July 2020 (UTC)
  • And yet again a really simple "mistake" easily caught out [148] they have had to apologise for. One involving the altering (in this case just cropping) of a photo on Fox news. How many people work on in the "lets not publish dishonest material department", none?Slatersteven (talk) 15:46, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
  • Look at the picture on right. Why are these soldiers digging in a pile of rubble? Are they trying to rescue someone? And why aren't they using tools? Were they bombed?
Oh, wait - it's actually the raising of the flag on Iwo Jima, just... cropped. François Robere (talk) 16:06, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
I thought linking to YouTube videos like that was a copyvio per WP:YOUTUBE? PackMecEng (talk) 15:50, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
That applies to articles, not here. That is a Fox News broadcast and linked by a recognized organization's YouTube channel. No one is proposing to use it in an article. -- Valjean (talk) 15:56, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
No, copyvios apply to the whole of Wikipedia. PackMecEng (talk) 16:02, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
Also I was not aware the tabloid Raw Story owned the rights to that broadcast? PackMecEng (talk) 16:07, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
A link is not a copyvio. -- Valjean (talk) 00:49, 7 July 2020 (UTC)
See WP:VIDEOLINK, WP:ELNEVER and WP:COPYVIO. Specifically things like Copyright infringing material should also not be linked to. You are wrong. PackMecEng (talk) 01:01, 7 July 2020 (UTC)

We could make this a weekly event. The Fox news altered picture of the week.Slatersteven (talk) 16:37, 6 July 2020 (UTC)

Honestly, I think this is a total non-story. They used a picture with Epstein and Maxwell. Trump was not part of the story so why include his picture? Perhaps they could have used a different picture of Epstein and Maxwell? The problem with using this to "prove" a problem is it undermines the case. It doesn't prove the issue since there are perfectly reasonable answers as to why not include Trumps picture (the story wasn't about him in any way shape or form). Instead what this does is suggest there is validity to the view that people will make a big deal out of anything in an attempt to make Fox look bad. The only real mistake was not cropping Melania as well. It would have been an awkward picture but she was also not involved in the story. This is more pathetic than anything else. Springee (talk) 16:39, 6 July 2020 (UTC)

It was not about his wife either, they included her.Slatersteven (talk) 16:42, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
I said that. My guess is aesthetically it looked odd to either have Epstein right at the edge of the image or have Melania obviously cut off. So perhaps the controversy should have been why did they leave her in rather than removing Trump as neither had anything to do with the story in question. Perhaps they are biased against Melania. Springee (talk) 17:00, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
Well as they have said "it was a mistake" without saying why we shall not know what their "thinking" was. You are right, its not very significant, other than as another example of photo manipulation.Slatersteven (talk) 17:04, 6 July 2020 (UTC)
How difficult is it to just present an unmodified photo in a news story? How can removing a sitting POTUS from a photo be considered aesthetics? How many excuses are we going to make for their "mistakes"? Particularly when they always appears to benefit one person -- supported by the owner and founding CEO. O3000 (talk) 01:02, 7 July 2020 (UTC)
How difficult is it to just present a different photo in a news story, [[149]], corr that was hard.Slatersteven (talk) 09:26, 7 July 2020 (UTC)
Fox News have since apologised for this error [150]. Regards  Spy-cicle💥  Talk? 19:26, 7 July 2020 (UTC)
[151] François Robere (talk) 19:50, 7 July 2020 (UTC)

Current tally

A current rough tally of votes is

  • Option 1 70 votes
  • Option 2 24 votes
  • Option 3 38 votes
  • Option 4 10 votes
  • Total 142 votes

These are all probably off by a handful of votes, but it clearly shows that opinion is equally split between Reliable, and any degree of unreliable/additional considerations apply. Hemiauchenia (talk) 19:31, 6 July 2020 (UTC)

Of course this RfC is WP:NOTVOTE and the close should be based of the strength of arguments presented, but it clearly shows that there is no strong numeric concensus one way or the other. Hemiauchenia (talk)

Post-close pre-result comments

  • Can someone please fix the contradictory templates at the top? One says "Please do not contribute further" while the other says "New comments are still welcome". --Guy Macon (talk) 02:36, 8 July 2020 (UTC)
    Guy Macon, the top (correct) box is {{Closing}}, and the smaller one inappropriately still soliciting comments is {{RSN RfC}}, it seems. RSN RfC says it should be removed while a close is taking place, so I've gone ahead and taken it out. If you or anyone else want to fix up the messages it displays, they're encoded in the {{RSN RfC status}} subtemplate. {{u|Sdkb}}talk 07:58, 8 July 2020 (UTC)
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

Question about close

@Rosguill, Primefac, and Lee Vilenski: Feel free to move this elsewhere; it's unclear to me where questions about the close are best posted, since there are three of you. My question concerns: In areas outside these two subjects, as well as reporting from local/affiliate stations, Fox is generally seen as reliable (emphasis mine, of course).

Most of the people participating in this RfC did not mention local affiliates, and some of those who did (including me) argued that they shouldn't be included here. I'm wondering how you found an active consensus in favor of considering them generally reliable. I think what you meant is that there was no finding that they are necessarily problematic just because they're Fox affiliates (or that they don't necessarily suffer from the same issues that Fox News does), which isn't what the closing statement says. They are separate newsrooms, and I don't see consensus that all of those affiliates are generally reliable. Could you clarify (or modify)? Maybe even just "Consensus to apply standard WP:NEWSORG reliability criteria to Fox affiliates"? Thanks. — Rhododendrites talk \\ 19:24, 24 July 2020 (UTC)

Rhododendrites, your reading is correct. Our intent was to convey that this discussion's outcome did not apply to local affiliates, and that NEWSORG therefore continues to apply there. signed, Rosguill talk 19:51, 24 July 2020 (UTC)
Agreed with the above. Primefac (talk) 02:13, 27 July 2020 (UTC)

Sharing this more widely?

I must have missed the watchlist notice, the signpost entry, or any attempt to make others aware of this !vote. I don't disagree wtih it, but seriously, what happened to the notices? Thanks. Mike Peel (talk) 21:56, 24 July 2020 (UTC)

It was posted at centralized discussion, used the RfC format, and took place on the noticeboard where source discussions happen. Signpost will report on it after the fact. I suppose a watchlist notice is something that could be discussed, but I've never seen a watchlist notice used for that purpose? — Rhododendrites talk \\ 02:41, 25 July 2020 (UTC)