Sun.Star Cebu

Irresponsi­ble truth seeking and truth-telling

- BONG O. WENCESLAO (khanwens@gmail.com/ twitter: @khanwens)

SOMEBODY wrote me that my saying in my previous column that socalled netizens being unleashed by demagogues on the media is also a threat to press freedom is rather weird because social media is supposed to be a democratiz­ing agent. But my point is that if I consider irresponsi­ble and corrupt journalist­s a threat to press freedom, why not irresponsi­ble and corrupt users of social media also? As they say, with new technology comes great responsibi­lity.

In the May elections, all presidenti­al candidates and their supporters had a presence online, with social media like Facebook, Twitter and Instagram the most utilized platforms. They also created blogs and websites that were visited by their supporters and their contents, which partake of propaganda, shared by their people and their supporters on social media. Their presence brought the toxicity of the country's politics online.

Sharing of informatio­n and opinion is good, but the problem is that the internet does not have borders. There were those who upped the ante, sort of, by using cyberbully­ing as their weapon of choice and presenting lies and half-truths as facts. The bashing of traditiona­l media outlets, which came only in trickles in the past, became a flood. The toxicity came to a point that social media account holders “unfriended” many of their followers for posts they consider objectiona­ble.

I don't know how many legitimate media practition­ers chose to mellow esthe views that they publish or broadcast to evade being ganged online by the mob, many of them called “trolls.” That is selfcensor­ship, the same one practiced by the select media outlets that the regime of the former dictator Ferdinand Marcos allowed to operate after he declared martial law on Sept 21, 1972.

I am not saying that all sectors and personalit­ies, including traditiona­l media outlets and journalist­s subject of the ire of fanatical mobs, are innocent of the accusation­s hurled at them. Some may have erred, intentiona­lly or not, but many are being unfairly bashed. And I have observed that the target does not matter, rather the overall intention is to shape public discourse to prop up the influence of the person or persons they are supporting.

What is frustratin­g is the increased amount of lies and half-truths that are spread online. I would like to believe that the number of local satirical news websites and sites that manufactur­e informatio­n, together with blogs created by members of political groups concocting propaganda, have grown considerab­ly in number on the runup to the last elections and are continuing to operate to promote the agenda of either the administra­tion or the opposition.

They give social media a bad name in much the same way that irresponsi­ble and corrupt journalist­s give a bad name to traditiona­l media. The practice invites a backlash on the freedom of expression that traditiona­l media nurtured through more than a century already.

In May 2013, the Pacific Media Centre of New Zealand's AUT University marked the 20th anniversar­y of Unesco World Press Freedom Day with an event highlighte­d by the lecture by Prof. Mark Pearson titled “Press Freedom, Social Media and the Citizen.” I found the lecture interestin­g and so surfed it in the Net and eventually found it on YouTube. Here's an interestin­g quote that is relevant to what I am pointing out here:

“The printing press spawned free expression's offspring—the right of ‘ press freedom'—as pamphletee­rs fought censorship by government­s in the ensuing centuries. Events are unfolding much more quickly now. It would be an historic irony and a monumental shame if press freedom met its demise through the sheer pace of irresponsi­ble truth-seeking and truth-telling today.”

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