Google News will begin labeling "fact-checking" articles that appear major news story clusters. Richard Gingras, the "Head of News" at Google, writes that Google News will check for schema.org ClaimReview markup:
Over the last several years, fact checking has come into its own. Led by organizations like the International Fact-Checking Network, rigorous fact checks are now conducted by more than 100 active sites, according to the Duke University Reporter's Lab. They collectively produce many thousands of fact-checks a year, examining claims around urban legends, politics, health, and the media itself.
In the seven years since we started labeling types of articles in Google News (e.g., In-Depth, Opinion, Wikipedia), we've heard that many readers enjoy having easy access to a diverse range of content types. Earlier this year, we added a "Local Source" Tag to highlight local coverage of major stories. Today, we're adding another new tag, "Fact check," to help readers find fact checking in large news stories. You'll see the tagged articles in the expanded story box on news.google.com and in the Google News & Weather iOS and Android apps, starting with the U.S. and the U.K.
TechCrunch notes that "The Schema community builds markups for structured data on the internet. The group is sponsored by Google but also has support from Microsoft, Yahoo and Yandex."
(Score: 2) by schad on Monday October 17 2016, @04:04PM
No, I'm afraid not. Most of your snark falls in the "You're dumb, and I will not waste my time with you" category, so there's not a lot of variety. Kudos for mixing it up a little with the heavy sarcasm here, I suppose. But you're laying it on really thick to imply that I'm too dumb to get it otherwise. So it's just a slightly different form of your usual.
A straight response would've been more effective, I think. I wouldn't have been able to tell if you were responding genuinely or if you were mocking me in some way that I just wasn't seeing. That's not snark, of course, but most snark is just so mindless that I'm not sure I can ever really appreciate it.