I am pleased to announce that the site is completly stable now and is running at peak performance. Thank you for your patience and understanding whilst we worked on this issue.
'I am the voice from the outer world and I will lead you to paradise..' 😶
Knoll’s law of media accuracy is the adage that "everything you read in the newspapers is absolutely true, except for the rare story of which you happen to have firsthand knowledge".Â
For example, this suggests that someone might notice that a news story about an event they were personally involved with is full of errors, but then forget that these errors exist when watching news stories about other events.
This phenomenon can be caused by the infeasibility of verifying many claims made by the media, the tendency to assume that perceived authority figures are reliable, and the desire for one's preferred source of information to be right, among other issues.
Accounting for this can help you assess the reliability of various sources of information beyond newspapers, like TV news, blogs, and even people that you talk to directly.When assessing the reliability of sources, consider not just whether there are errors, but also how many and how big they are, while remembering that their presence in one instance doesn't guarantee the presence of errors in other instances.
Tartarian Training Painting
Uprising - Muse