Oz commercial radio granted collective bargaining

Oz commercial radio granted collective bargaining

Oz commercial radio granted collective bargaining

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission has granted Commercial Radio Australia members interim authorisation for ten years to collectively bargain with Google and Facebook concerning payment for content featured on those platforms.

CRA chief executive officer Joan Warner welcomed the ACCC’s announcement, which allows radio stations to collectively engage in discussions about fair payment and exchange information about negotiations without breaching competition laws.

“CRA now has the opportunity to act as the bargaining agent for CRA members to secure fair compensation for individual publishers for content they produce that appears on the digital platforms, to reflect the value of that content and the resources required to produce that content,” CRA chief executive officer Joan Warner said.

“Negotiated outcomes providing compensation from Google and Facebook will help to sustain commercial radio stations in Australia, many of whom provide small and local communities with regional news and information.”

In its draft determination the ACCC said the proposed conduct is likely to “result in public benefits through reduced transaction costs, improved input into negotiations and contribution to the sustainability of Australian news businesses”.

CRA members can commence collective negotiations while the ACCC seeks feedback on CRA’s application for final authorisation.

CRA represents 261 commercial radio stations across the country. It will be voluntary for CRA members to participate.  The proposed authorisation excludes Nine Entertainment which previously announced it has reached agreements with Google and Facebook. 

The ACCC has invited submissions in relation to its draft determination by 30 September 2021 before making a final decision.

NAB 2021 cancelled

NAB 2021 cancelled

NAB 2021 cancelled

Amidst continued uncertainties around international travel, the organisers of the NAB media industry show in Las Vegas have announced that they have cancelled the delayed 2021 event.

Chris Brown, Executive Vice President and Managing Director of Global Connections and Events at the National Association of Broadcasters, said:
“For more than a year we have worked tirelessly to bring our industry together safely in Las Vegas at NAB Show. Unfortunately, the pandemic and surge of the Delta variant has presented unexpected and insurmountable challenges for our global community.

“As we have always kept the best interest and safety of the industry as our priority, it has become apparent in the face of these challenges that we can no longer effectively host NAB Show or our co-located events, the Radio Show and Sales and Management Television Exchange, in person.

“NAB Show is the premiere destination for the media and entertainment industry and we will not move forward with a show that delivers anything less than the excellence our community has come to expect and deserves from us.

“While we are disappointed that we will not be together again in person next month, we look forward to converging in Las Vegas at the 2022 NAB Show, April 23-27, 2022, to reignite our passion for our business and focus on a bright future ahead.”

The cancellation follows the announcement by a range of major exhibitors that they had decided against taking part this year.

SABC builds new sports alliance

SABC builds new sports alliance

SABC builds new sports alliance

The Walt Disney Company Africa and the South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) have signed a distribution agreement to bring local and international live sporting events, news programming, as well as library and film sporting content from ESPN to SABC Sports viewers across South Africa, through its SABC Sports Channel. SABC launched its new sport channel in June 2021. 

Under the agreement, SABC Sports viewers will unlock a selection of premium sports content. ESPN brings an unparalleled portfolio of US sporting content and documentaries to its viewers across the world and in Africa, the broadcaster extends this offering by showcasing the latest in European football and other international franchises.

SABC Sports will bring the world’s top track and field athletes to its viewers through ESPN’s four live World Athletics Events, with the first coming straight from Nairobi with the U20 Championships, currently on air. Additional events include the World Indoor Championships from Serbia (March 2022), World Race Walking Championships from Belarus (April 2022) and the World Championships from the USA (July 2022).

After a successful inaugural season in Kigali earlier this year, teams from across the continent will once again gather to showcase the best in local basketball talent in a hotly-anticipated second season of the Basketball Africa League (BAL), a partnership between the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) and the National Basketball Association (NBA). SABC Sports viewers can look forward to select fixtures of this celebrated local league being broadcast live on their screens in 2022.

For Boxing fans, SABC Sports will be bringing live boxing events and programming to viewers in 2022, including over 150 hours of boxing content from ESPN’s vast library, showcasing the greatest in boxing events, athletes and moments in the sport’s history.

SABC Sport General Manager, Gary Rathbone, stated: “This agreement is going to add significant depth to our current offering on the SABC Sports Channel. Our channel will now offer unrivalled content to our local sport fans seven days a week, thanks to ESPN’s great boxing archive and film and documentary library. With the addition of long-awaited regular live boxing events, as well more live Football, Athletics and African Basketball, it’s clear that this partnership will deliver right across the board for our viewers”.

Rathbone added: “This partnership will not only give our viewers access to great sports content but will see the SABC Sport Channel and our teams benefiting from the resources and experience that this collaboration with ESPN offers.”

Kyle De Klerk, Director: Sports, The Walt Disney Company Africa, said: “With this content agreement we are excited to not only be bringing ESPN’s unprecedented and compelling sporting offering to new audiences, but to also be taking a great step in highlighting and celebrating some of the up and coming leagues and athletes from around this continent.”

Christine Service, Senior Vice President and General Manager of The Walt Disney Company Africa, noted: “We are delighted to be extending our relationship with SABC to include ESPN, bringing another diversified and exciting brand from Disney’s portfolio to local free-to-air audiences.”

Pakistan offering visas to journalists and media workers in Afghanistan

Pakistan offering visas to journalists and media workers in Afghanistan

Pakistan offering visas to journalists and media workers in Afghanistan

On August 15, Pakistan’s Ambassador to Afghanistan Mansoor Ahmad Khan said that visas for Afghan journalists and families were being specially facilitated in “this period of uncertainty”.

The Pakistan Press Foundation (PPF) – a member of the Consultative Network to the intergovernmental Media Freedom Coalition – has welcomed the Pakistan government’s move to facilitate the visas of journalists and media personnel in Afghanistan. 

A WhatsApp number (00923222807683) for the press counsellor has been provided, which media personnel requiring visas can contact, and as Khan has announced, will be facilitated.

In a tweet, Information Minister Fawad Chaudhry said that the Pakistan press section in Kabul had received hundreds of visa applications from the international media. Chaudhry said to facilitate their evacuation from Kabul, a special cell had been created.

Amid the escalating situation in Afghanistan, as the Taliban gained ground over previously Afghan government controlled territories, on August 13, Pakistan’s Interior Minister Sheikh Rashid had announced that in light of the evolving situation in Afghanistan, Pakistan had decided to ease its visa policy for journalists and media workers. 

Rashid appealed to those international journalists and media workers who want to leave Afghanistan via Pakistan to apply for the Pakistani visa. The interior minister said that his ministry would issue these individuals visas on a priority basis.

Rashid said the decision to ease the visas was being taken by the Pakistani government keeping in mind the protection of journalists and media workers working in Afghanistan.

PPF hopes that the facility will act as a resource to a safe passageway for members of the media in Afghanistan who are currently in need of a safe exit. 

Source: Pakistan Press Foundation

Australia’s Channel Nine rapped by regulator over paid-for editorial

Australia’s Channel Nine rapped by regulator over paid-for editorial

Australia’s Channel Nine rapped by regulator over paid-for editorial

Australia’s media regulator has announced that TCN Channel Nine (Nine) has breached broadcasting rules for failing to disclose a commercial arrangement with McDonald’s behind a segment on its Today programme aired in October 2020.

Over the course of the programme the Today show presenters discussed a new McDonald’s product line and presented the range on-camera.

An Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) investigation found Nine did not satisfactorily bring to viewers’ attention that it had a commercial arrangement with McDonald’s to endorse the products, as required under the Commercial Television Industry Code of Practice.

Under the Code, broadcasters must disclose commercial arrangements to viewers if they air material that endorses or features the products of a commercial partner. This can be done before, during or after the programme or on the programme’s official website.

ACMA Chair Nerida O’Loughlin said viewers should not be left guessing if what they are watching is a paid endorsement.

“This kind of blurring of the lines between advertising and programme content breaks down the audience’s trust in what they are seeing,” Ms O’Loughlin said.

“Transparency around commercial arrangements is very important for viewers, particularly if the programme contains a mix of facts, editorial and advertisements.

“In this case Channel Nine was not clear enough in disclosing their commercial arrangement and I expect them to do better.”

Accepting the breach finding, Today will list all its commercial arrangements on its website. Nine will also bring the ACMA investigation and finding to the attention of its staff.

Last year Channel 7 also breached the commercial arrangement rules with a segment on The Morning Show showcasing a Big W clothing line. The ACMA report into this broadcast was published in October 2020.

In 2019 the ACMA commissioned qualitative and quantitative research to gauge community perceptions and attitudes to commercialisation in news and current affairs. It included a finding that 84 per cent of respondents believed that they had noticed commercial influence in television current affairs.

“The findings highlighted the importance Australians place on transparency, including measures which allow viewers to distinguish opinion or commercial content from factual reporting,” Ms O’Loughlin said.

Pegasus and China-sponsored hacking cause alarm across media industry

Pegasus and China-sponsored hacking cause alarm across media industry

Pegasus and China-sponsored hacking cause alarm across media industry

This week’s revelations about the scale of infiltration of mobile phones used by journalists – including those working for a range of AIB Member companies – and further intelligence about the China’s cyber attacks on US companies, including Microsoft Exchange systems has sent shockwaves through the media and cyber security industries.

According to reports in the UK’s Guardian and the US Washington Post, the spread of Pegasus spyware has infiltrated the mobile phones of thousands of journalists, activists and lawyers, notably those involved in human rights cases. Journalists working for AIB Members Al Jazeera, Bloomberg and France 24, as well as Agence France-Presse, The Wall Street Journal, CNN, The New York Times, El Pais, the Associated Press, Financial Times, Le Monde, The Economist, and Reuters, were targeted by the Pegasus spyware, The Guardian reported.

The phone numbers of the affected phones were leaked to Amnesty International who worked with Forbidden Stories, a not-for-profit Paris-based journalism organisation. Amnesty has verified hundreds of the numbers tracing the users.

The AIB reported on the first Pegasus revelations in December 2020. The scale of the spyware infiltration had not been realised at that point.

This incident, and its scale, demonstrates the need for constant vigilance by everyone working in media organisations. The threats are real and immediate and it is why the AIB is involved in urgent, wide-scale research into the vulnerabilities that exist within the Internet of Things (IoT) that can be harnessed by malign actors. This work is being undertaken by the AIB’s research assistant and Doctoral student at the University of Oxford and will be provided to all AIB Members in order to help them better protect their organisations and staff from the increasing number of attacks that are being perpetrated. We have received input from a large number of AIB Members to assist in this work, including workflows and other data that will inform this major, important research project. Contact the AIB Secretariat to discuss how your organisation can get involved, or benefit from the work.

Separately, the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency [CISA] has provided background and support in connection with the Chinese cyber threat that has hit critical infrastructure in the USA and elsewhere in the world. CISA has uploaded the Current Activity regarding the U.S. Government release of an indictment and several advisories detailing Chinese cyber threat activity.

CISA reports that it, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), and the National Security Agency (NSA) have observed increasingly sophisticated Chinese state-sponsored activity targeting U.S. political, economic, military, educational, and critical infrastructure personnel and organisations. In response:

CISA also encourages users and administrators to review the blog post, Safeguarding Critical Infrastructure against Threats from the People’s Republic of China, by CISA Executive Assistant Director Eric Goldstein and the China Cyber Threat Overview and Advisories webpage.

The UK’s National Cyber Security Centre has also published details of the UK’s response to the Chinese threat. Its release says:

The UK has revealed that Chinese state-backed actors were responsible for gaining access to computer networks around the world via Microsoft Exchange servers. The NCSC assessed that it was highly likely that a group known as HAFNIUM, which is associated with the Chinese state, was responsible for the activity.

The NCSC recommends following vendor best practice advice in the mitigation of vulnerabilities, and any organisations which have yet to install security updates released for Microsoft Exchange servers should do so. More information can be found on Microsoft’s website: https://msrc-blog.microsoft.com/2021/03/02/multiple-security-updates-released-for-exchange-server/

The attack on Microsoft Exchange software was highly likely to enable large-scale espionage, including acquiring personally identifiable information and intellectual property. It is the most significant and widespread cyber intrusion against the UK and allies uncovered to date.

The UK is also attributing the Chinese Ministry of State Security as being behind activity known in open source as “APT40” and “APT31”. Activity relating to APT40 included the targeting maritime industries and naval defence contractors in the US and Europe, and for APT31 the targeting of government entities, including the Finnish parliament in 2020.

The NCSC statement is available on its website: https://www.ncsc.gov.uk/news/uk-allies-hold-chinese-state-responsible-for-pervasive-pattern-of-hacking

The UK Foreign Secretary’s statement is available at: https://www.gov.uk/government/news/uk-and-allies-hold-chinese-state-responsible-for-a-pervasive-pattern-of-hacking

David Kaye, former UN Special Rapporteur on freedom of expression and Marietje Schaake, International Policy Director at Stanford University’s Cyber Policy Centre, have written an op-ed piece in The Washington Post. It’s behind a paywall, although a limited number of articles are available free-of-charge each month. Read the piece here. David Kaye was one of the key contributors to the AIB/PMA Media Freedom Summit held earlier this year that brought together senior executives of broadcasters globally to discuss the challenges posed by media freedom infringements.