The International Forum for Responsible Media Blog

Month: June 2013 (Page 3 of 5)

Social Media: How many people use Twitter and what do we think about it?

Twitter logoThe influence of Twitter on the media continues to rise – Gary Hayes’ Social Media Counter (see below) suggests that there are over 4 million tweets a day.  But how much Twitter activity is there in the UK?  The position is not entirely clear.  On 13 June 2013, the Office of National Statistics reported that the UK has the second highest proportion of social networkers in the EU: 57% of internet users said that they used “social networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter“. Continue reading

Case Law, Strasbourg: Ageyevy v Russia, Breach of Article 8, including right to reputation – Hugh Tomlinson QC

european-court-of-human-rights-source-garant-ruIn the case of Ageyvey v Russia ([2013] ECHR 346) the First Section of the Court of Human Rights found a number of breaches of Article 8 in a case involving an allegation of child abuse by the parents of an adopted child.  In particular, the Court found that there had been a failure adequately to investigate the unauthorised disclosure of confidential information and failure to protect the right to reputation of a parent suspected of child abuse. Continue reading

Charles Wheeler Lecture: Part 1, Leveson and the Royal Charter – Harriet Harman MP

Harriet-Harman_1418021cThe draft Royal Charter supported by the victims of press intrusion and approved by parliament provides the complaints system which is long overdue and poses no threat to the freedom of the press.  It is ironic that when we’re talking about news reporting, hostile reporting of the Draft Royal Charter has fostered a number of myths.  I want to debunk some of those today. Continue reading

News: French President’s Partner Awarded Privacy Damages over “Three in a Relationship” Case

frondeuseThe partner of the French President, Valerie Trierweiler, has won a privacy claim against the authors and the publisher of the book La Frondeuse (“The Rebellious One”). On 5 June 2013, the 17th Civil Chamber of the Tribunal de Grande Instance de Paris ordered the authors and publishers to pay the sum of €10,000. The magazine Point de Vue was also ordered to pay €3,000 in damages.  Ms Trierweiler’s spokesman said the damages would be donated to charity. Continue reading

American surveillance raises tough questions for British journalists – Laurence Dodds

NSAOver the last week, revelations about the NSA’s mass surveillance programme have burst into the public sphere in a storm of reports, op-eds, comments and interviews. But what hasn’t gained quite so much attention is how this programme threatens the press itself. For any journalist who uses the web – and, spoiler, that’s all of them – the scale and depth of spying that is now being revealed endangers one of the most fundamental principles of journalism: the confidentiality of sources. Continue reading

Opinion: The Value of a Free Press – Oliver O’Callaghan

Leveson PressWhen it was revealed recently that the libel reform campaigner and lauded press freedom champion Simon Singh also donated money to the privacy advocacy group Hacked Off, it was met with incredulity by some sections of the press. The idea that someone could be in favour of a press that was free to criticise the powerful and expose the truth about the important issues of the day, while simultaneously against unwarranted invasions of private lives in the pursuit of prurient gossip, appeared to be some kind of unfathomable cognitive dissonance. Continue reading

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