To: Talisa Mason t.mason@fakejob.ca
From: Nate Lee n.lee@fakejob.ca
Subject: I found some things online to bring to our meeting
Hey Talisa,
I am writing this email to let you know that I found some information to bring to our meeting. Because of the fact that youYou had asked for ideas about how to determine the accuracy of online information, so I gathered these pointsthis information.
Consider the writerswriter's purpose. Is the writer trying to sell you histheir product, convince you of a fact or inform you aboutof something they feel is important? Perhaps they have some valid points, but keep in mind the issue that they might have also added in their opinion disguised as a “fact.” For example: lets, let's say you're reading reviews on a travel website. The writer reviews 3 different places to stay in Sapporo, JpanJapan. The review gives 1 star, 3 stars and 4.5 stars to 3 different hotels. There are some clues when you scroll down to the bottom of the page - you can see the author was sponsored by location #3, which received 4.5 stars. That does't mean all the information is inaccurate –, but it definitely means their opinion about location 3 is not neautralneutral. itsSo it's always wise to research who you are gathering your researchinformation from.
The text above was approved for publishing by the original author.
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