The law that is most avoided is the one which states you cannot lie and the statements must not be misleading. This is must commonly avoided in gossip magazines that although the law states that all statements must be researched and true, they over exaggerate stories that are often lies to make their target audience more interested and therefore increase the sales of their product.

In regards to monitoring the content, there are two regulatory bodies: the ASA and the PCC who monitor different things in the media. The PCC monitors the content of the magazines and make sure that it is suitable for their target audience; whereas the ASA control the advertisements that are in the magazines and decide whether it is right for the audience the magazine are targeting. The PCC also set codes and regulations that the magazine publishers must follow. One of the regulations is 'accuracy'; this is to make sure that the magazine does not include content or images that is misleading and that must be true. Another regulation is 'opportunities to reply'; this is to ensure that the content covers both sides of a story so that the readers of the magazines will hear both sides of a story and will not have an unfair opinion that has been given to them by the magazine story and, encase their information is inaccurate, must also be open to adding any 'replies'. The last rule is 'privacy'. This rule states that the producers of the magazine content must recieve permission from subjects involved in the stories before publishing anything and that they also make sure that any of the content does not go against anything that subjects have said cannot be published. The ASA's role to 'regulate the content of advertisements, sales promotions and direct marketing in the UK' is done through investigation of complaints about the adverts, sales promotions or direct marketing within the magazine content. It also makes sure the advertising is done to their advertising regulations.

Code of Practice -
All members of the press have a duty to maintain the highest professional standards. The Code, which includes this preamble and the public interest exceptions below, sets the benchmark for those ethical standards, protecting both the rights of the individual and the public's right to know. It is the cornerstone of the system of self-regulation to which the industry has made a binding commitment.
It is essential that an agreed code be honoured not only to the letter but in the full spirit. It should not be interpreted so narrowly as to compromise its commitment to respect the rights of the individual, nor so broadly that it constitutes an unnecessary interference with freedom of expression or prevents publication in the public interest.
It is the responsibility of editors and publishers to apply the Code to editorial material in both printed and online versions of publications. They should take care to ensure it is observed rigorously by all editorial staff and external contributors, including non-journalists, in printed and online versions of publications.
Editors should co-operate swiftly with the Press Complaints Commission in the resolution of complaints. Any publication judged to have breached the Code must publish the adjudication in full and with due prominence agreed by the Commission's Director, including headline reference to the PCC.
Editors should co-operate swiftly with the Press Complaints Commission in the resolution of complaints. Any publication judged to have breached the Code must publish the adjudication in full and with due prominence agreed by the Commission's Director, including headline reference to the PCC.
10 | *Clandestine devices and subterfuge |
i) The press must not seek to obtain or publish material acquired by using hidden cameras or clandestine listening devices; or by intercepting private or mobile telephone calls, messages or emails; or by the unauthorised removal of documents or photographs; or by accessing digitally-held private information without consent.
ii) Engaging in misrepresentation or subterfuge, including by agents or intermediaries, can generally be justified only in the public interest and then only when the material cannot be obtained by other means.
| |
11 | Victims of sexual assault |
The press must not identify victims of sexual assault or publish material likely to contribute to such identification unless there is adequate justification and they are legally free to do so.
| |
12 | Discrimination |
i) The press must avoid prejudicial or pejorative reference to an individual's race, colour, religion, gender, sexual orientation or to any physical or mental illness or disability.
ii) Details of an individual's race, colour, religion, sexual orientation, physical or mental illness or disability must be avoided unless genuinely relevant to the story.
| |
13 | Financial journalism |
i) Even where the law does not prohibit it, journalists must not use for their own profit financial information they receive in advance of its general publication, nor should they pass such information to others.
ii) They must not write about shares or securities in whose performance they know that they or their close families have a significant financial interest without disclosing the interest to the editor or financial editor.
iii) They must not buy or sell, either directly or through nominees or agents, shares or securities about which they have written recently or about which they intend to write in the near future. | |
14 | Confidential sources |
Journalists have a moral obligation to protect confidential sources of information. | |
15 | Witness payments in criminal trials |
i) No payment or offer of payment to a witness - or any person who may reasonably be expected to be called as a witness - should be made in any case once proceedings are active as defined by the Contempt of Court Act 1981.
This prohibition lasts until the suspect has been freed unconditionally by police without charge or bail or the proceedings are otherwise discontinued; or has entered a guilty plea to the court; or, in the event of a not guilty plea, the court has announced its verdict.
*ii) Where proceedings are not yet active but are likely and foreseeable, editors must not make or offer payment to any person who may reasonably be expected to be called as a witness, unless the information concerned ought demonstrably to be published in the public interest and there is an over-riding need to make or promise payment for this to be done; and all reasonable steps have been taken to ensure no financial dealings influence the evidence those witnesses give. In no circumstances should such payment be conditional on the outcome of a trial.
*iii) Any payment or offer of payment made to a person later cited to give evidence in proceedings must be disclosed to the prosecution and defence. The witness must be advised of this requirement.
| |
16 | *Payment to criminals |
i) Payment or offers of payment for stories, pictures or information, which seek to exploit a particular crime or to glorify or glamorise crime in general, must not be made directly or via agents to convicted or confessed criminals or to their associates – who may include family, friends and colleagues.
ii) Editors invoking the public interest to justify payment or offers would need to demonstrate that there was good reason to believe the public interest would be served. If, despite payment, no public interest emerged, then the material should not be published.
| |
There may be exceptions to the clauses marked * where they can be demonstrated to be in the public interest.
i) Detecting or exposing crime or serious impropriety. i i) Protecting public health and safety. iii) Preventing the public from being misled by an action or statement of an individual or organisation. 2. There is a public interest in freedom of expression itself.
3. Whenever the public interest is invoked, the PCC will require editors to demonstrate fully that they reasonably believed that publication, or journalistic activity undertaken with a view to publication, would be in the public interest and how, and with whom, that was established at the time.
4. The PCC will consider the extent to which material is already in the public domain, or will become so.
5. In cases involving children under 16, editors must demonstrate an exceptional public interest to over-ride the normally paramount interest of the child.
|
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2240715/Leveson-Report-Investigative-journalists-breach-data-protection-rules-face-2-years-jail.html This article was interesting to read in regards to changes that are being made to ensure journalists can't use personal information which is an important issue since the phone hacking scandal.
No comments:
Post a Comment