LAST WEEK, News Corp’s newspapers The Daily Telegraph, Herald Sun, The Courier Mail and The Adelaide Advertiser caused controversy by publishing front page “exclusives” and “special reports” alleging that more gas is needed to avoid electricity blackouts in the future.

If readers turned the page and read the fine print, they would learn that this so-called “news” was actually not news. It was an advertorial (a fancy word for an advertisement), paid for by – you guessed it – the fossil fuel industry.

    •  Joshi   ( @Joshi@aussie.zone ) OP
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      1 year ago

      This is deliberately misleading. I’m not sure why you think it can’t be outlawed, numerous laws exist regarding false and misleading advertising which is exactly what this is.

      It is not reasonable to expect even a majority of people to pick up on this kind of deliberate deception.

      Making this kind of deliberate deception illegal would not be limiting freedom of speech, opinion pieces and clearly labelled advertising are one thing, a front page story with no indication that it is not news is another.

        •  Joshi   ( @Joshi@aussie.zone ) OP
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          1 year ago

          I’m sincerely sorry if I sound angry. I was trying to be concise. I am genuinely interested in hearing why you think outlawing this kind of deception would not be appropriate. I am quite certain we would disagree but I am always interested in hearing opposing opinions.

          Really, please expand on this, I will try to respond with kindness and understanding despite any disagreement.

            •  Joshi   ( @Joshi@aussie.zone ) OP
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              1 year ago

              I’m sorry if I’m misunderstanding, I don’t feel that you’ve actually addressed the issue at hand.

              Specifically the event where Murdoch papers took payment from the fossil fuel lobby and in return ran front page stories pushing specifically their line that increased natural gas is necessary. This was made technically legal by small print on the next page.

              The longstanding convention is that when presented as such a story has been written by a journalist to create the content and not pursue promotion, ‘advertorials’, while problematic in themselves, have always had a note, often small print, directly adjacent to the story.

              The event reported here was deliberate misdirection intended to escape the notice of the reader.

              The issue isn’t the freedom of the fourth estate, it isn’t even advertising or opinion in the press, it is that it should be clear to the reader what is news, what is opinion and what is advertising. There already exist laws that protect this separation. The Murdoch papers have found a loophole and have deliberately exploited it to deliberately mislead their readers. It is difficult to interpret it any other way and it is this specifically which should be made illegal by clarifying existing laws to close this loophole.

    •  eureka   ( @eureka@aussie.zone ) 
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      1 year ago

      education system to teach all kids (because we no longer go to school ourselves)

      Why should we abandon the vast majority of our population, just because we’re not forced to attend school? Education isn’t limited to the classroom!

      As with any issue of survival, the application of effective skills are worthy solutions to the problems we face.

      It’s less a solution and more a coping mechanism. I am in support of promoting these skills, but I’m also in strong support of mitigating the commecialisation of news media as much as possible. And that includes outlawing these kind of articles.