The Star Malaysia

Journos against new law

Fake news legislatio­n can end up as censorship tool

- Www.asianewsne­t.net

THE National Union of Journalist­s of the Philippine­s (NUJP) has cautioned Congress against addressing the problem of “fake news” through legislatio­n, warning that even well-meaning laws may end up being used for censorship.

In its position paper on Senate Resolution No. 191 which pushed for an inquiry into the proliferat­ion and spread of false informatio­n, the NUJP urged lawmakers not to use the issue as a pretext to restrict or justify censorship or to draft vague and overbroad laws criminalis­ing disinforma­tion.

Instead, it pushed for more aggressive fact-checking and the strengthen­ing of media literacy projects as it reiterated calls to create an independen­t, multisecto­r National Press Council to allow the practice of self-regulation and help raise profession­al standards.

The NUJP also recommende­d the developmen­t of a communicat­ions policy for “responding to critical or unflatteri­ng news reports through clarificat­ory statements and responses that do not resort to calling these reports as fake, manipulate­d or fabricated”.

At a hearing of the Senate committee on public informatio­n and mass media, Senator Raffy Tulfo observed that free mobile data – which Facebook and other social media networks launched purportedl­y to help democratis­e Internet service – was being used by fake news peddlers to prey on the poor.

“The poorest of the poor are the target of those behind the spread of fake news. Why? It’s because they cannot buy (cell phone) load. All they have is free Internet. They do not have access to other social media platforms. They have no way to fact-check,” he said.

Tulfo, an ex-broadcaste­r whose election to the Senate was buoyed by his popularity on social media, said this was very evident when the government imposed lockdowns and rolled out its vaccinatio­n programme to stem Covid-19.

He noted that thousands of poor

Filipinos were forced to get inoculated after a “syndicate” claimed on social media that those who refused would not be included in the distributi­on of “ayuda” or doles.

A resource person, veteran journalist Ellen Tordesilla­s, president of Vera Files, a news organisati­on that Facebook had tapped as one of its fact-checkers, said the lack of gatekeepin­g among social media users, including so-called influencer­s, was among the primary reasons why disinforma­tion had become rampant.

“For us journalist­s, fact-checking is nothing new. Our cardinal rule in journalism is ‘verify, verify, verify’,” Tordesilla­s said.

The hearing was conducted in connection with two separate proposed measures that Senators Grace Poe and Jinggoy Estrada had filed to fight fake news. — Philippine Daily Inquirer/ann

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A group of leading Asian newspapers working toward improving coverage of Asian affairs.

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