Patent attorney Vanessa Otero recently fanned the flames of the fake news debate when she re-posted a chart on Facebook breaking down various sources by reliability and political viewpoint.

“We are living in a time where we have more information available to each of us than ever before in history. However, we are not all proficient at distinguishing between good information and bad information,” she wrote when she first introduced the chart. “This is true for liberal, moderate, and conservative people. I submit that these two circumstances are highly related to why our country is so politically polarized at the moment.”

Since then, her illustration has been shared thousands of times across social media and even landed on one of the “news” sites she labeled as “utter garbage.”

Here’s her chart:

Otero received plenty of kudos for her work, but she was also hammered with some of that armchair internet criticism we’ve come to expect.

“LOL this chart is a complete joke. None of mainstream is accurate they are all paid off shills with an agenda that report what they are told by their masters... not journalists they are fictionalists” — Michele Ellen.

“CNN, and MSNBC should be falling of the left side of the paper” — Bert Proulx.

“Wow; if you put NYT and WaPo in the center, then your whole chart is off! Better move them a little more to the left!” — Harry Habrams.

Then there’s Infowars, which didn’t take too kindly to its position on the chart. This is how the right-wing website responded: “We’ve created our own news chart depicting how most leftist mainstream media sites promote tyranny, while the conservative ‘garbage’ sites on the previous map actually promote liberty and freedom.”

Here’s the result of the Infowars effort:

In the face of the backlash, Otero explained her thought process, and even offered a blank version that everybody could edit as they see fit.

“I respectfully submit that if you make your own, you should be able to place at least one source in each of the vertical columns, because they exist, and at least one in each of the horizontal rows, because they also exist,” she wrote. “If you have just a couple sources that you think are in the middle but none exist either to the right or left of them, or up or down from them, you may be on the wrong track.”

Take this quiz:Can you pick out the fake news stories that duped millions of people this year?