The following is a list of satirical websites that have been created by companies and contain content that has been designated by fact-checkers as fake news.
Even though many satirical sources are labeled as such with disclaimers, there is a long history of satirical content being falsely perceived as true.[1] According to Snopes, this misunderstanding can be due to a variety of reasons:
The following table lists websites considered by fact-checkers to be satire:
Part of the same network as Batty Post.
Its name is similar to the unrelated Indian English-language daily newspaper called Business Standard.
Part of same network as The Last Line of Defense.
Part of the same network as The Last Line of Defense.
Spoof of DeadState.
Spoof of Snopes.
Some websites self-labeled as satire have been accused by journalists from news outlets such as Politico and The New Republic of duplicity by means of clickbait headlines, humorless appeals to partisans, hidden disclaimers, and oversaturation of ads.[72][73][74]
Webpage includes a hidden disclaimer that claims itself as satire.
Copied story from World News Daily Report.
Has hidden disclaimer.
According to PolitiFact, "The website's "About Us" page features a disclaimer saying it contains "humor, parody and satire," but the author has repeatedly defended his stories as truth."
Added a disclaimer at the bottom of the page. Was approved for running ads on Content.ad network. Spread its articles to Pro-Trump groups on Facebook.
Does not contain a disclaimer, and its owner information is hidden.
Posted a joke story that was only fully apparent when reading it to the end. Republished a story from Empire Herald. Published a false story with an out-of-context image.
The Business Standard News is a satirical site designed to parody the 24-hour news cycle. The stories are outlandish, but reality is so strange nowadays they could be true.
The poll [from Business Standard News] ... was cited in an opinion piece submitted to The Progressive.
the "interview" was still picked up by at least one actual news site, with no mention of its satirical bent. To further muddy the waters, there actually is a site called the Conservative Chronicle, in which Buchanan's syndicated columns appear.
Stories about the Mormon Church's attempt to limit the sales of tissues and emollients in an effort to curb masturbation came from a fake news web site.
Reports that New Jersey Governor Chris Christie said that teachers should be paid minimum wage plus bonuses came from a fake news web site.
An article reporting that the pundit had been arrested for using the women's bathroom came from a fake news site
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