Fiji Sun

Nobel Peace Prize Winner Ressa: Technology is Curse and Blessing

‘Her newsroom is a movement and not the ordinary place of work. She cares more about the impact the journalism has on communitie­s than simply engagement’

- DAWN MCMULLAN SENIOR EDITOR OF INTERNATIO­NAL NEWS MEDIA ASSOCIATIO­N (INMA) Feedback: jyotip@fijisun.com.fj

yrants rip the heart out of democracy by attacking the truth, Maria Ressa, a Filipino journalist and a 2021 Nobel Peace Prize co-winner, told Internatio­nal News Media Associatio­n (INMA) members earlier this year.

She encouraged media companies to combat these attacks with journalism, communitie­s, and technology. When she got a call from Oslo last Friday morning, informing her about the prize, Ms Ressa gasped: “Oh my gosh! I am speechless.”

The award winning journalist­s

The Norwegian Nobel Committee announced it awarded the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize to her and a Russian journalist Dmitry Muratov for “their efforts to safeguard freedom of expression, which is a preconditi­on for democracy and lasting peace”.

Ms Ressa the co-founder and CEO of Rappler, a news Web site in the Philippine­s. She led coverage of Rodrigo Duterte’s populist presidency, which got her and her colleagues arrested and charged with multiple crimes, including tax evasion, fraud, and “cyber libel.”

Mr Muratov is the editor-in-chief of Novaya Gazeta, one of the few remaining independen­t newspapers in Russia. Gazeta is known for hard-hitting investigat­ive reporting on the presidency of Vladimir Putin and saw six of its reporters killed since 2000.

“[Ressa and Muratov] are representa­tives of all journalist­s who stand up for this ideal in a world in which democracy and freedom of the press face increasing­ly adverse conditions,” said Berit ReissAnder­sen, chair of the Norwegian Nobel Committee.

“INMA congratula­tes Maria Ressa and Dmitry Muratov,” INMA CEO Earl J Wilkinson said.

“When we talk about transforma­tion, we typically mean business models, revenue, P&Ls, workflows, and the like. Yet Maria’s and Dmitry’s achievemen­t today is a reminder there is a bigger parallel battle that we are all fighting: attacks from government­s and a dilution of democracy via attacks on facts and truth. In one form or another, this battle is happening on every continent today.

“In the battle for facts, journalism is activism”

In the past, Ms Ressa was named

Time magazine’s Person of the Year 2018 and won numerous journalism awards. Before founding Rappler, she worked for two decades as an investigat­ive reporter in Southeast Asia for CNN.

Ms Ressa might have been speechless when she received the call from Oslo, but her voice had been loud and clear for years: “The reason [Rappler is] still alive and I am not in prison is because we shine the light.”

Fighting ‘tyranny’

When she met INMA members in March this year, she talked about how journalism, truth, and democracy are under attack across the world. She criticised social media platforms for facilitati­ng the spread of disinforma­tion and even violence against journalist­s.

“If you can make people believe lies are the facts, then you can control them,” she warned.

She quoted Tim Snyder, author of On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century: “If you want to rip the heart out of a democracy directly, if you want to go right at it and kill it, what you do is you go after facts.”

What differenti­ates Ms Ressa from many Western journalist­s is her belief that “in the battle for facts, the battle for truth, journalism is activism”.

In her interview with INMA, she urged media companies to focus on truth: “We don’t have the power we’ve had in the past. And while you still have your vestigial power, please collect truth tellers together. Create a new vocabulary and find ways to protect the facts.”

Her conviction helps one understand her vision and Rappler’s unique operating model: its pillars are journalism, community, and technology.

In the March master class hosted by INMA’s Espen Egil Hansen, Ressa talked as much about hardships of reporting in an increasing­ly authoritar­ian state as about building networks, or “communitie­s of action” as she called them, and developing a digital platform Lighthouse.

“Technology is both the curse and the blessing,” she told INMA.

Shining the light with in-house tech INMA’s Researcher-In-Residence Greg Piechota has been advising Ressa in the developmen­t of a revenue model for Rappler, with the support of Media Developmen­t Investment Fund.

Rappler has been funding its mission with advertisin­g sold against its journalism, communitie­s turned into members and contributo­rs, and technology tools for social media monitoring.

Those tools were developed to help map the informatio­n ecosystem in the Philippine­s, monitor the spread of disinforma­tion on

Facebook and other networks, and inform Rappler’s coverage and Ms Ressa’s thinking.

“Maria is a courageous journalist, a passionate leader, and technology visionary,” Mr Piechota said.

“Her newsroom is a movement and not the ordinary place of work. She cares more about the impact the journalism has on communitie­s than simply engagement.”

Ms Ressa’s pet project is Lighthouse, an in-house technology platform that:

Manages and serves its content.

Collects and analyses the user data to help personalis­e experience­s.

Helps distribute content across platforms.

Helps manage and mobilise communitie­s of Filipinos to tackle problems together: from climate change to “fake news” about vaccines. In reaction to the Nobel Peace Prize, Ressa said in a statement: “It could not have come at a better time — a time when journalist­s and the truth are being attacked and undermined. We thank the Nobel for recognisin­g all journalist­s both in the Philippine­s and in the world who continue to shine the light even in the darkest and toughest hours.”

The 2021 Nobel Peace Prize has been awarded to journalist­s of Russia and Maria Ressa (right) of the Philippine­s for their “courageous fight” to safeguard “freedom of expression”

 ?? Pictures: Newscom, Getty Images © GRAPHIC NEWS ??
Pictures: Newscom, Getty Images © GRAPHIC NEWS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji