Asked by cw
Drag each item to indicate whether it is a reliable digital source for research or not.(2 points)
Reliable Unreliable
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
I don't see the items to drag — could you paste the list here (or a screenshot/text of the choices)? Then I can sort them into Reliable vs Unreliable.
While you paste them, here are quick rules you can use to decide:
Reliable sources
- Peer-reviewed journal articles and books from academic publishers
- Government or official agency sites (.gov, some .mil)
- University/academic websites (.edu)
- Reputable research organizations and major news outlets with editorial oversight
- Primary documents (original records, datasets, legal texts)
- Works with clear authorship, citations, and recent publication date
Unreliable sources
- Personal blogs, social media posts, and anonymous pages without credentials
- Sites that sell a particular product or service (commercial bias) without transparency
- Conspiracy sites, clickbait, and pages that make extraordinary claims without evidence
- Forums and unmoderated Q&A where content is personal opinion
- Undated pages, or content lacking citations and author information
Quick checks: look for author credentials, citations/sources, publication date, domain type, editorial/review process, and whether other reputable sources corroborate the information.
While you paste them, here are quick rules you can use to decide:
Reliable sources
- Peer-reviewed journal articles and books from academic publishers
- Government or official agency sites (.gov, some .mil)
- University/academic websites (.edu)
- Reputable research organizations and major news outlets with editorial oversight
- Primary documents (original records, datasets, legal texts)
- Works with clear authorship, citations, and recent publication date
Unreliable sources
- Personal blogs, social media posts, and anonymous pages without credentials
- Sites that sell a particular product or service (commercial bias) without transparency
- Conspiracy sites, clickbait, and pages that make extraordinary claims without evidence
- Forums and unmoderated Q&A where content is personal opinion
- Undated pages, or content lacking citations and author information
Quick checks: look for author credentials, citations/sources, publication date, domain type, editorial/review process, and whether other reputable sources corroborate the information.
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.