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    0 starsnetwatch | Shared With: Everyone - Aug 26 2007 | science, pseudoscience
    The blog version of IMPROBABLE SCIENCE

    Homeopaths, advocates of untested herbal remedies, and credulous reporters who promote them take a beating at British doctor Ben Goldacre's Bad Science blog.

    Pharmacologist David Colquhoun of University College London hammers similar targets at DC's Improbable Science.

    Although both sites have a British emphasis, the quackery they expose is often international.

    Volume 317, Number 5839, Issue of 10 August 2007

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    0 starsnetwatch | Shared With: Everyone - Aug 26 2007 | science, pseudoscience, news
    Crank Dot Net

    The Weekly World News, the supermarket tabloid that once claimed 12 U.S. senators were space aliens, is ending publication this month. But there are enough purveyors of pseudoscience, anti-science, and quackery to keep the following three Web sites in business.

    Crank Dot Net* furnishes a taxonomy of crackpot Web sites. Erik Max Francis, a computer programmer in San Jose, California, rates the entries on how far they've strayed from reality. For instance, a page on the possibility that the sun has an unobserved twin merits only a "fringe" classification, whereas a site that dispenses advice on conducting diplomacy with aliens earns the highest ranking.

    Volume 317, Number 5839, Issue of 10 August 2007