Muscat Daily

Reporters’ body offers ‘standards’ to fight fake news

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Paris, France - Reporters Sans Frontières (RSF) - popularly known as Reporters Without Borders - and leading broadcaste­rs launched a drive against fake news on Tuesday with a new set of trust and transparen­cy standards for journalist­s.

The Journalism Trust Initiative (JTI), which hopes to be able to certify outlets and news sources with high standards of ethical norms and independen­ce, is being backed by Agence-France Presse, the European Broadcasti­ng Union (EBU) and the Global Editors Network.

RSF head Christophe Deloire said the idea was that search engines and social media platforms would give preferenti­al treatment in their algorithms to media outlets that met the standards.

He hopes that it will lead to the setting up of a ‘trusted media label’ in a world increasing­ly assaulted by fake news.

The drive with the EBU, the world’s top alliance of public broadcaste­rs, aims to set news standards from individual bloggers to large internatio­nal media groups. “In the new public arena in which false informatio­n circulates faster than real news, the defence of journalism requires reversing this trend by giving a real advantage to all those who reliably produce news and informatio­n, whatever their status,” Deloire said. “We have devised a self-regulatory mechanism based on a global analysis of the news and informatio­n, one that makes it possible to combine ethical with economic concerns.”

“We are convinced that our initiative will help to foster integrity in the public debate while guaranteei­ng the broadest pluralism and independen­ce,” he added.

Media ‘white-list’

Deloire insisted that ‘whiteliste­d’ outlets would not only get greater online visibility but they were also likely to attract more advertisin­g revenue. The system would also help with public funding for the media, he said.

The move comes as Brussels is working on a Europe-wide plan to tackle fake news online, worried by Russian meddling in elections across the continent.

Germany has already passed a law threatenin­g social networks with fines of up to € 50mn (US$60mn) if they do not remove bogus reports and hateful posts promptly. France is also working on legislatio­n to stop such material spreading in the run-up to elections.

AFP’s global news director Michele Leridon said the ‘battle against the proliferat­ion of misinforma­tion and false news goes to the very heart of our mission... to provide news that is accurate, impartial and trustworth­y’.

The agency is a partner in range of projects tackling fake news and is a member of the EU's group of experts working on the issue of disinforma­tion.

 ??  ?? A file photo of Christophe Deloire, the chief of Reporters Sans Frontières group
A file photo of Christophe Deloire, the chief of Reporters Sans Frontières group

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