on 13-03-2013 08:46 AM
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
on 18-03-2013 07:17 PM
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 .
haha mines better:^O
on 18-03-2013 07:25 PM
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 .
haha mines better:^O
i guess from where you stand it is 🙂 that journalists prodigious imagination is good enough to launch a second convergence review all on his lonesome though 😛
on 19-03-2013 09:10 AM
It's all turning very sour for Conroy & Ms Gillard is backing away, trying to distance herself.
Labor MP's are running away from this disaster, is there no end to the agony this government heaps on itself?
on 19-03-2013 09:41 AM
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.
So is he saying he will then control/censor what we get to see and hear via the NBN
They seem very scared of their dirty tricks being made public
on 19-03-2013 09:52 AM
I can't listen to Kim Williams speak and not think of the article in the OP and
The men of TV and a media regulation stitch-up
on 19-03-2013 11:18 AM
This is a Braveheart moment for this country & all Australians.
This has gone much further than the Labor attack on News Lt., this is an attack on one of the basic tenets of democracy, freedom of the press.
The people of Australia will never stand for this & they will never forget what this government has tried on.
This alone will damage Labor for decades, a gift to the opposition to flog them out of office for years to come.
on 19-03-2013 11:40 AM
This has all thelooks & the smell of trying another backroom deal just like the mining tax. She called Fairfax media to help her get out of the hole she & Conroy has dug for the Party.
Ms Gillard sought to assuage concerns at Fairfax Media over the weekend by phoning chief executive Greg Hywood in a move seen by some as an attempt to split the industry ahead of yesterday's hearings.
Mr Hywood appeared to toughen his stance against the legislation, however, telling senators that the reform threatened publishers with a "nuclear option" by removing their long-standing right to privacy exemptions essential to journalism.
on 19-03-2013 12:15 PM
well hywoods wrong (if he in fact said that) as a member of the press council they retain the right to privacy exemptions. the only non-member is WA newspapers. so hywoods being a little creative with the truth there.
on 19-03-2013 04:51 PM
being a little creative with the truth there.
Oh the irony :^O
on 19-03-2013 05:08 PM
.
well hywoods wrong (if he in fact said that) as a member of the press council they retain the right to privacy exemptions. the only non-member is WA newspapers. so hywoods being a little creative with the truth there.
Hywoods wrong?? oh well you'd know.....:^O