Julia Gillard's henchman Stephen Conroy attacks freedom of the press

nero_bolt
Community Member

Socialism bordering on communism Gillard and Labor style.  ( This will please the luvies and the socialists on here I am sure)


 


 


THIS government will go down in history as the first Australian government outside of wartime to attack freedom of speech by seeking to introduce a regime which effectively institutes government sanctioned journalism.


 


 


http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/opinion/an-aggressive-attempt-to-silence-your-media/story-e6frezz0-1226595884130


 


Communications Minister Stephen Conroy is threatening to take away privacy law exemptions - often described as shield provisions - which are fundamental to the operation of journalism in our democracy. He clearly said today that these protections for journalism would be removed if the proposed Public Interest Media Advocate was unhappy with the oversight of a media company's reporting by the Australian Press Council.


 


This removes the capacity of journalists to do their job - it is a not too sophisticated endeavour to gag the media.


 


The government also risks standing as the one that turned the clock back to last century, with its highly interventionist, vague and unnecessary public interest test on media ownership - which is nothing more than a political interest test which governments will use to punish outlets they don't like.


 


It will only serve to add layers of uncertainty, huge cost and inefficiency, adding yet another cost on business and Australian taxpayers.


 


The stated rationale of the public interest test is that it is to preserve media diversity. Yet there is more media diversity today than in all of human history. Moreover, both the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission and the Australian Communications and Media Authority already have extensive powers to enforce media diversity today.


 


The minister has made no case as to the inadequacy of these existing powers. This proposal cannot be about diversity - that false need in the face of plenty is a sad disguise for the government's desire to control the media. The irony that the reference to a desire to preserve diversity is contained in a statement which advocates the abolition of the 75 per cent television broadcast reach rule is not lost on journalists.


The Public Interest "Tsar" will be beholden to government and will act as its gatekeeper. It is a sad day for Australian democracy.


 


It also represents a profound debasing of public policy process to sit on two reports for a year and then to put a gun to the head of parliament and business demanding passage of a series of bills in less than a week - all without any consultation with the print and digital media industry. Bills which have a huge impact on major employers, thousands of employees, investors and taxpayers in the Australian economy are being proposed in an old fashioned "stick 'em up" style hardly reflecting reasonable behaviour in a dynamic modern digital economy.


 


The whole approach today constitutes a travesty of public policy and parliamentary process.


 


 



 


Good read here


 


http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/julia-gillards-henchman-stephen-conroy-attacks-freedom-of-the-press/story-e6freuy9-1226595971160


 


 

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Julia Gillard's henchman Stephen Conroy attacks freedom of the press

The day News Ltd supported newspaper regulation Bernard Keane


News Ltd and the Coalition have previously backed far more draconian regulation of newspaper operations than that proposed by the Gillard government. How times change.


There’s been considerable hype in the last week from News Limited and the Coalition about the purported threat to a free press from Stephen Conroy’s plan to require the print and online media’s self-regulatory bodies to show they can self-regulate.


How times change.


In 2002, then-communications minister Richard Alston, eager to find a way to remove cross-media owne...via “editorial separation”. That involved companies that wanted to merge demonstrating to the govern...


Org charts and editorial policies are one thing, but the proposed legislation would have handed the government-appointed regulator the power to dictate the structure, staffing and journalistic methods of newspapers if they became part of a cross-media entity, backed by the threat of refusing approval to major media mergers.


The prospect of this power deeply disturbed some industry figures. Fairfax, in its submission to the inquiry on the bills, warned:


“Parliament should be extremely wary to see written into law words such as ‘news management’, ‘news compilation processes’ and ‘news interpretation capabilities’.  First, no one knows what such phrases actually mean — they have never been defined in law.  Second, such words go to the heart of our editorial processes.  Third, the government has never had direct oversight over editorial processes — and for excellent reason.  Fourth, to have the heart of our editorial processes subject to government review and regulation is to present an immediate threat to the free operation of those editorial processes. These provisions therefore would compromise the free operation of a free press in a democracy.”


The MEAA warned “these proposals involve dangerous governmental involvement in the day-to-day workings o...


News Ltd, however, supported the proposed requirement. In its submission, the only comment it made on editorial separation requirements was that the conditions for meeting them b...


Scroll forward to 2006. As part of the price for securing the support of the National Party to free ...amendments to the Broadcasting Services Act affecting both regional television and radio news servic...


For regional television, ACMA was made to impose a licence condition on regional television broadcasters to broadcast “a minimum level of material of local significance” regardless of whether that material would be watched or was wanted by audiences.


For regional radio, ACMA had to impose a licence condition on any radio licensee that changed ownership, containing a number of requirements:


To maintain an “existing level of local presence” relating to staffing levels, studios and productio...


Moreover, the minister was given a power to direct ACMA about how it was to oversee all these requirements, and was given an unrestricted power to direct ACMA to impose more conditions on licensees about local content.


The commercial radio industry was outraged about these additional requirements and powers, and long ...expressed particular concern about the wide powers of the minister, and raised the possibility of mi...


News Ltd made a submission to the inquiry into the legislation opposing the package, but only because it would allow television broadcasters to multichannel while ...


When the Gillard government proposes that the newspaper industry’s existing self-regulatory model, which the industry claims is highly effective, be demonstrated to be so, without any direct role for government of any kind, News Ltd says it’s Stalinism, while the Coalition claims it’s the worst attack on a free press since WWII. How things have changed since the Howard government proposed direct regulation of newspaper journalism and succeeded in imposing direct regulation of radio and television journalism in regional Australia.

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Julia Gillard's henchman Stephen Conroy attacks freedom of the press

It was interesting (ironic) to hear Conroy (Insiders) say that the 75% reach rule would become irrelevant with live Internet media streaming. I would guess that he might have overlooked that his/the NBN connection rate is snail-pace, and due for completion (Ha) in 2021.

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Julia Gillard's henchman Stephen Conroy attacks freedom of the press

silverfaun
Community Member


 


The word according to comrade Conroy

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Julia Gillard's henchman Stephen Conroy attacks freedom of the press

there are specific requirements by the artist of that cartoon, you do realise that you're in copyright violation of use rights there, don't you, girlie. 

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Julia Gillard's henchman Stephen Conroy attacks freedom of the press

      I thought some of you might like a look at the coalitions plans that wont make the comics..it makes for some grim reading.


this is a paper from the IPA who pretty much dictate the policies. its a (PDF) but not a big file.


 http://catallaxyfiles.com/files/2013/03/Commonwealth-reform-negative-value-adding-components.pdf

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Julia Gillard's henchman Stephen Conroy attacks freedom of the press

*ibis
Community Member


there are specific requirements by the artist of that cartoon, you do realise that you're in copyright violation of use rights there, don't you, girlie. 



 


will wonders never cease!


 


i can actually read what eloi wrote:O...he must be sober


 


you better go into hiding SF, the cartoon police will be out to get you:^O


 


 


 


 

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Julia Gillard's henchman Stephen Conroy attacks freedom of the press

*ibis
Community Member


      I thought some of you might like a look at the coalitions plans that wont make the comics..it makes for some grim reading.


this is a paper from the IPA who pretty much dictate the policies. its a (PDF) but not a big file.


 http://catallaxyfiles.com/files/2013/03/Commonwealth-reform-negative-value-adding-components.pdf



 


 i just had to have a quick look to see what this  catallaxyfiles is all about and make sure its not another fringe newspaper from berkeley california


 


this was an interesting read.........http://catallaxyfiles.com/2012/11/29/a-bit-closer-to-julias-cliff/


 


 


 


 

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Julia Gillard's henchman Stephen Conroy attacks freedom of the press

Julia Gillard's henchman Stephen Conroy attacks freedom of the press


 


 i just had to have a quick look to see what this  catallaxyfiles is all about and make sure its not another fringe newspaper from berkeley california


 


this was an interesting read.........http://catallaxyfiles.com/2012/11/29/a-bit-closer-to-julias-cliff/


 


 


 


 



problem is i linked to a IPA release and you to a fantasy smear page. both pages have origins on the side you argue for, and both sum them up nicely. my pdf exposes the real plan, and yours the  personal atttack based on fantasy .

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Julia Gillard's henchman Stephen Conroy attacks freedom of the press


http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-03-18/rowland-media-regulation-stitch-up/4578648


 


 


 


The men of TV and a media regulation stitch-up


By ABC's Michael Rowland


Updated 3 hours 10 minutes ago


When 32 of the nation's best-known male TV presenters gathered for a photo shoot two weeks ago, they didn't expect to be used as the mouthpiece for a News Limited campaign against Conroy's media reforms, writes ABC's Michael Rowland.


 


 


....The Sunday Telegraph reporters and photographers were all extremely professional and a pleasure to work with.


 


Fast forward to last Friday, two weeks after the photo shoot...


 


The paper, planning to run the story on Sunday, approached the ABC and the other networks wanting some extra quotes from the presenters involved. Specifically it wanted to know our views on the Federal Government's contentious media reforms.


 


Fair enough. It had been one of the biggest stories of the week and the Telegraph was within its rights to seek the views of some of the country's most prominent TV news figures.


 


Our comments were sent off and we all thought nothing more of it.


Then the bomb dropped on Sunday morning.


 


There we were on page 9 laughing and joking in one of Justin Lloyd's great photos but the headline above screamed:


The Men Of TV Vent Free Speech Outrage


 


Readers could easily be forgiven for thinking we had, as the paper put it, 'united to share their… concerns about the Government's controversial media reforms.'


Except, well, no we hadn't.


We had united for a photo shoot and to share our views on the ups and downs of our jobs. The media reforms at that stage were but a twinkle in Stephen Conroy's eyes.


By all means quote us on the reforms but don't misrepresent this gathering of the country's 'most trusted TV faces' as a council of war on what the Government is up to.


 


Only eight of the 32 present were quoted on the reforms and while I understand that could have very well been a space issue it's not exactly a united industry front against the Government.


I know for a fact that three of my colleagues involved in the shoot didn't express any view about the planned changes. And, although it didn't make the cut, my contribution to the debate was to welcome the proposed updating of the ABC charter to reflect the strength and popularity of online platforms.


 


Other journalists involved have also moved to distance themselves from the manufactured story.


Yes, strange indeed the Telegraph of all papers overlooked that particular insight.


So not only was the story misleading but the slant of the piece also buried, until page 112, some really good insights and experiences of men, like Hugh, that I personally hold up as industry role models.


In a Twitter exchange with me yesterday the Sunday Tele's editor, Mick Carroll, said Senator Conroy didn'...


No, Mick. Just like you, I believe in media freedom and free speech. I also, like my colleague Joe O...


In this case, Mick, you haven't.


Michael Rowland has presented ABC News Breakfast since the launch of ABC News 24 in July 2010. View ...here.


 


 


 


read more; http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-03-18/rowland-media-regulation-stitch-up/4578648


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 



 


If the media were as honest as the pretend to be, there would be no material for Media Watch to stay on air for as long as it has.

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