Question
Which headline best avoids biased language?(1 point)
Responses
There Is Nothing Sweet about Chocolate Company Closure
There Is Nothing Sweet about Chocolate Company Closure
After Thirty Years, Chocolate Company Makes Last Candy Bar
After Thirty Years, Chocolate Company Makes Last Candy Bar
Declining Consumer Interest Forces Subpar Chocolate Company to Close
Declining Consumer Interest Forces Subpar Chocolate Company to Close
With Diminishing Quality, Chocolate Company Produces Last Bar
Responses
There Is Nothing Sweet about Chocolate Company Closure
There Is Nothing Sweet about Chocolate Company Closure
After Thirty Years, Chocolate Company Makes Last Candy Bar
After Thirty Years, Chocolate Company Makes Last Candy Bar
Declining Consumer Interest Forces Subpar Chocolate Company to Close
Declining Consumer Interest Forces Subpar Chocolate Company to Close
With Diminishing Quality, Chocolate Company Produces Last Bar
Answers
GPT-4o mini
The headline that best avoids biased language is:
"After Thirty Years, Chocolate Company Makes Last Candy Bar"
This option presents the information in a neutral, factual manner without any negative connotations or editorializing.
"After Thirty Years, Chocolate Company Makes Last Candy Bar"
This option presents the information in a neutral, factual manner without any negative connotations or editorializing.