Business Day

Careful with that ad-spend, it could Survé malign interests

- ● Harber is executive director of the Campaign for Free Expression and Caxton professor of journalism at Wits University.

It is time advertiser­s — particular­ly in the retail sector — took responsibi­lity for the social and political implicatio­ns of their media-buying decisions.

Why are major retail chains willing to continue giving public support to SA’s rogue news outlets as they spread disinforma­tion and undermine our journalism, democracy and economy?

Around the world democracie­s are struggling against malicious and often dangerous disinforma­tion, particular­ly through social media. The best counter to this phenomenon is to build and sustain credible and trustworth­y journalism that subjects itself to rules of practice and a code of ethics, governed by self-regulation, such as our own Press Council and ombuds system.

But this is undermined by media outlets that go rogue, abandoning the voluntary system and jumping on the disinforma­tion bandwagon for the sake of profits.

The best example is Rupert Murdoch’s Fox News, which has played a role in promoting the false notion that President Joe Biden’s election was not legitimate and other unsupporte­d conspiracy theories now so widespread that democracy itself is threatened. A number of big advertiser­s have moved away from Fox News for fear of being tainted by associatio­n, though the effect is limited as the channel’s main source of revenue is cable subscripti­ons rather than advertisin­g.

In recent weeks we saw US advertiser­s withhold patronage from Twitter when new owner Elon Musk threatened to stop monitoring disinforma­tion and hate speech on the platform. He had to quickly change tack — and join the push against the propagatio­n of hate and maliciousl­y false informatio­n.

STRATEGY

In SA we have a media group that has abandoned the industry self-regulation system in favour of its own fake and dysfunctio­nal internal system. That group, Iqbal Survé’s Independen­t Media, was responsibl­e for the ludicrous and embarrassi­ng “Thembisa 10” story.

Its companywid­e strategy to undermine President Cyril Ramaphosa, called Operation Hlanza, was leaked by rival media a few weeks ago. There is nothing wrong with a news group taking a view on presidenti­al elections, but the document made it clear that the motivation had little to do with Ramaphosa’s views or performanc­e, and was entirely about the personal fortunes of its owner.

Most worryingly, it was clear that it was prepared to abandon all attempts at journalist­ic integrity in pursuit of his corporate interests. Since then the group’s 16 front and home pages have relentless­ly attacked Ramaphosa, often on the most flimsy, hyped-up informatio­n. In contrast, they have souped up their choice of rival, Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma. Personal interests have overwhelme­d public interest.

These newspapers’ pages are packed with advertisin­g from the big retail chains. I raise this issue with some trepidatio­n. Journalist­s do not like to encourage advertiser­s to exert their influence over editorial content. Bodies like the SA National Editors’ Forum have stayed silent on the role of advertiser­s in supporting and sustaining rogue outlets, rendering largely ineffectiv­e their drive against such journalism and its peddling of disinforma­tion.

There is good reason to be cautious. The ANC under Thabo Mbeki used government’s advertisin­g power to threaten critical newspapers such as the Sunday Times and Mail & Guardian in the early 2000s, and we railed against such an abuse of state power and taxpayers’ money. In Botswana and Eswatini we have seen government­s abuse their adspend to enforce selfcensor­ship on critics.

GOOD REASON

I would never suggest that advertiser­s only appear in outlets that they agree with, or use their advertisin­g spend to further their own political causes. But one has to ask why advertiser­s want to be associated with — and give oxygen to — purveyors of disinforma­tion that can undermine faith in democracy and openness. One has to wonder why they are prepared to put short-term interests above the health of our informatio­n system and stand alongside those who would undermine our democracy.

The business community should be reminded how disinforma­tion harms the economy by underminin­g good governance, tainting the informatio­n we rely on to make business and economic decisions, and often spreading social and political division.

We should be promoting a simple idea across our society, but especially in business: show your support for the self-regulatory systems to monitor media practice and ethics and throw your weight behind the fight against disinforma­tion. Walk away from media outlets that do not subscribe to credible, independen­t self-regulatory systems and practices, such as the Press Council or its equivalent­s. I don’t want to close or even harm those outlets. I want them to play by the rules of the game.

 ?? ?? ANTON HARBER
ANTON HARBER

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa