Sunday, February 24, 2013

Media & Journalism

Hey everyone. I forgot that the Media topic has another set class that all 3BAs must do. Here's the required readings for Media that we'll discuss this Thursday:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2012/aug/24/prince-harry-pictures-public-interest
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/prince-harry/9500433/Jeremy-Hunt-No-public-interest-in-nude-Prince-Harry-photographs.html

Prince Harry pictures: publication was 'demonstrably in public interest'

Louise Mensch backs Sun's publication of photos of prince, but Lord Prescott says action proves press regulation is dead
Louise Mensch
Prince Harry could have been subject to a 'honey trap', said Louise Mensch. Photograph: Afp/AFP/Getty Images
 
The publication of photographs of Prince Harry naked in a Las Vegas hotel room was demonstrably in the public interest, a Conservative member of the Commons culture committee has said.
But the former deputy prime minister Lord Prescott has attacked the Sun for publishing the pictures, saying it proved that self-regulation of the press is dead.
The Sun published the pictures after Prince Charles's aides threatened legal action against newspapers if they published the images, even though they had already been circulated online. One of the two pictures of Harry was splashed across the paper's front page on Friday with the headline: "Heir it is!" In an editorial, the newspaper claimed there was a "clear public interest" in publishing the photographs "in order for the debate around them to be fully informed".
Speaking on Radio 4's Today programme, Louise Mensch, who recently announced her resignation as an MP, said the publication of the photos was demonstrably in the public interest.
"There is an active reason to publish them [the photos] … There is a clear, demonstrable public interest: the royal family receives money from the civil list; Prince Harry in inviting people to his room [had] the expectation of privacy so there's questions of judgment and questions of security."
She added that Harry could have been subject to a "honey trap", making the issue one of public interest. She also argued that the Leveson media enquiry was cowing the press. "We cannot have a situation where our press as a bloc is so scared of the Leveson enquiry that they refuse to print things in the public interest."
Mensch also said that she was "chilled" after learning that the newspaper industry watchdog body, the Press Complaints Commission, petitioned papers not to publish the pictures. "[The PCC] tried to tread on this story, they should not have done it."
But Prescott told the Guardian: "The Sun's actions prove that as of this morning, self-regulation is now dead. This [story] is not in the public interest, it is in the self-interest of Murdoch to earn money by breaching the privacy of anyone he wants, to sell his newspapers.
"The argument that just because it is all over the internet is spurious at least. There are lots of offensive images and extreme material on the web which international papers don't print."
Prescott added that he had drafted a report on what a new media regulatory framework (pdf), which could replace the PCC, could look like, which he hoped Lord Leveson would consider seriously.
The editor of the Independent, Chris Blackhurst, also speaking on Radio 4's Today programme, said he had taken the view that they were "private photos taken in a private space", that he had not been influenced by Leveson and didn't "need lessons on press freedom and morality from the Sun". He said the argument that publication was in the public interest was spurious.
"As for the idea that it's all out there on the internet and therefore we've got to publish, well I say to that there's a hell of a lot of material out there on the internet freely available to anyone and the press doesn't publish that.
He added, however, that he was concerned that following the Leveson inquiry, the Sunday tabloid press was " not the beast it once was".

Jeremy Hunt: No public interest in nude Prince Harry photographs

There was no public interest in the publication of photographs of Prince Harry nude in Las Vegas, the Culture Secretary has said.

Prince Harry in Las Vegas
Prince Harry in Las Vegas Photo: BAUER-GRIFFIN/EROTEME.CO.UK
Speaking to BBC News this morning, Mr Hunt said: "Personally I cannot see what the public interest was in publishing those.
"But we have a free press and I don't think it is right for politicians to tell newspaper editors what they can and cannot publish. That must be a matter for the newspaper editors.
"I just hope that people won't remember this, but they will remember the amazing good work that Prince Harry has done."
Mr Hunt added: "We can agree with what someone like Mr Murdoch does or you can disagree with it.
"But in the end that is not for politicians to tell editors what to publish.
"As I understand it even Buckingham Palace have said that editors have a right to publish what they want to and that is a matter for editors."
He added: "Rupert Murdoch is the ultimate Marmite proprietor. You either love him or hate him."
Earlier today Mr Murdoch, the News International owner, said printing the photographs was necessary in highlight press freedom.
He added the public should give the Prince "a break", days after the daily tabloid published photographs obtained by gossip website TMZ of the third in line to the throne undressed in a Las Vegas hotel.
He wrote on Twitter: "Prince Harry. Give him a break. He may be on the public payroll one way or another, but the public loves him, even to enjoy Las Vegas."
He followed up with a tweet reading: "We needed to demonstrate no such thing as a free press in UK. Internet makes a mockery of these issues. 1st amendement please."
More than 850 complaints have been made to the press watchdog about the naked photographs of the 27-year-old prince frolicking in the nude with an unnamed woman after they were published in Friday's edition of The Sun.
Nearly all are about invasion of privacy and are to be investigated in due course.
It has been reported that Mr Murdoch, 81, ordered newspaper editors to publish the images because he wanted to fire a warning shot at Lord Justice Leveson, the man leading the inquiry into press standards in the wake of the phone hacking scandal. News International has refused to comment on the speculation.
The Murdoch-owned tabloid argued that printing the images was in the public interest and a "crucial" test of the country's free press.
TMZ, the celebrity gossip website which first published the pictures, said they were taken last Friday after Harry and his entourage met some women in a hotel bar and invited them up to the royal's suite.
The group played a stripping game and someone in the party is thought to have captured the images of the naked prince on a camera phone.

Prince Harry and the Public Interest

Posted: 09/11/2012 5:56 pm
 
Being a public academic has its ups and downs. My recent appearance on the BBC Newsnight program discussing the UK publication of the Prince Harry naked photographs in Las Vegas generated an unusual amount of polarized feedback, some of it positive, some of it, er, shall we say mixed?
2012-09-01-some_feedback.png
Why not just say what you really think? As a postgraduate journalism lecturer I teach and encourage student debate on the definition of the public interest in privacy law and yes the clips used in my Newsnight interview were selectively edited from a much broader conversation but it wasn't an unfair characterization overall of what I wanted to communicate. My most recent research focus is on emergent relationships of the 'public interest' and the 'interest of the public' as I'm sure there will be a lot more discussion on these issues as the frequency of reality checks for inadequate national regulatory and legal frameworks trying to handle global digital media publication ramps up. Soon enough this issue will be back in the news with another absurd example of Britons getting their news from abroad.
Let's face it, most of us don't read printed newspapers anymore, or printed magazines, or printed books for that matter. It's not a good or bad thing. We just don't do it. Nearly three times as many people visit the Daily Mail website (the UK's most popular national newspaper website) in a day as buy the newspaper in an entire month. Amazon announced in August that on its site customers are now buying more e-books than hardcovers and paperbacks combined. We are in the midst of an era of the digitization and globalization of media. I think everyone basically gets that.
What is less clear is we fully understand the cascading impact of these digital changes on our media regulatory, legal and ethical frameworks like the official press guidelines by the Press Complaints Commission (PCC) on what publications in their jurisdiction can and cannot print. Some of these are simply no longer 'fit for purpose' and no amount of indignant regurgitation of small print legal scare tactics is going to change that. The sound and fury over the Sun newspaper's publication of the Prince Harry naked Las Vegas hotel room photographs is a case in point.
U.S. entertainment website TMZ bought some photos for a reported £10,000 (what a deal!) and published the images on their website on August 21, 2012. They were able to do this without any threat of legal reprisal because they are not operating in the jurisdiction of the PCC's Editors' Code of Practice. Their TMZ website is however freely available on the public Internet in the UK. From this point on the story was living, breathing and living on the Internet and no amount of legalize or moralizing about what is in the 'public interest' of UK citizens was going to change that reality.
By noon on August 22, 'Prince Harry' was trending on Twitter in the UK alongside another big news story, the imminent release of GCSE exam results. Like it or not, UK citizens were deeply engaged with the story. Three of the top five Google search terms relating to Prince Harry included 'TMZ' as UK citizens searched for the news source where they could view the photographs. Interest in the story was overwhelmingly local with England and Ireland occupying more than 50% of global searches after which interest dropped off dramatically to Commonwealth countries and finally the rest of the world. The main TMZ story was filled with advertisements targeting British consumers as the near real time advertising networks recognized and fed the demand with targeted UK products and services. By the time the Sun published the pictures in print on August 23 over an estimated 13.5 million UK citizens had already seen the photographs online and the search popularity for the images was already starting to wane. The Sun subhead said as much, "... pictures you've already seen on the Internet." According to Google search statistics the naked images over these three days were more than five times as popular as any other Prince Harry related search theme since 2004 when they started keeping detailed stats. The previous most popular search peaks were when Prince Harry dressed up in a Nazi uniform in 2005, when he made a politically incorrect comment about "our little Paki friend" in 2009, and the Royal Wedding in 2011. All of these are stories familiar to any British news junky (and all provide insight in one form or another into his private life) but the naked images were more popular than all of them put together.


2012-09-01-prince_harry_search_timeline.jpg
All of this data reflects a basic fact. Anyone interested in seeing the images, UK public interest laws be damned, just went online and searched for them or clicked on a link from one of their friends on a social network. The only feasible way of stopping this from happening would be to filter all of the content providers on the Internet in a similar fashion to the relatively successful censored public Internet in China. A strong case could even be made that by stifling the ability of UK publications with global audiences to publish the photos, the PCC was exercising anti-competitive practices and forcing UK news consumers to access their media from competitors abroad.
The actual result of the attempted PCC ban was the creation of a 'grey market' in news and information in the UK (not unlike the grey online markets that exist in China from users deploying proxies and software to get around the 'Great Firewall') where the images were available to any UK news consumer with a browser and Internet connection, just not through regulated UK media channels. These grey markets have flourished in recent memory in the UK from the Ryan Giggs affair to the identities of the two women who brought sex charges against Julian Assange in Sweden. Unless the regulatory frameworks are updated for reality, we can expect more examples of Britons getting their British news from abroad in a similar fashion to how the most popular online news sources in Zimbabwe, about Zimbabwean news, come from the UK due to an ongoing debate of what the Zimbabwean public thinks is in the public interest and what the Zimbabwean government thinks is in the public interest. Establishing privacy law in digital media at a national or regional domain is a slippery slope and as useful as putting in place restrictions on environmental emissions at a national or regional level. Pollution doesn't respect national borders so global regulators have long understood that the only really feasible way forward is to pursue global solutions, even if they are difficult and full of delicate negotiations. Data and information on the Internet doesn't respect national borders either and finding a way forward can be equally contentious as reflected by the differing national perspectives on the value of whistleblowing and the Wikileaks publication decisions. Nonetheless if there is any value in these digital media privacy and publication laws it will ultimately be found at the global and transnational levels.
The public interest and the interest of the public are merging in a gradual democratization of not just news creation and consumption but also the broader news agenda. Democratizing the news isn't just a concept, it is a shift in being for media in the UK. Popularity does not translate to public interest but engagement and community are new and powerful metrics in the news business and it isn't the exclusive domain of professional journalists to establish the news agenda. This democratization is happening at all levels from news gathering to publication. The person who took the photos of Prince Harry and sold them on is in the freelance photography marketplace and was richly rewarded for the snapshots. Ignoring the reality that 'everyone is a reporter' in the digital media era is attempting to put the genie back in the bottle. Think of the power and news value of the images coming from the tunnels of 7/7 or the streets of Syria.
Everyone may not operate according to long established principles of professional journalism but that doesn't change their ability to capture media with potential news value wherever and whenever they like. If Prince Harry's minders didn't want images splashed all over the world from the Las Vegas hotel room they needed to take all of the cameras away. And where does that stop? Again, like it or not, this is the era we live in. Like printed newspapers, the traditional definition and boundaries of reporting will never return so we're better off adapting than resisting. Following the Sun publication, over 12,000 army cadets and soldiers set-up a Facebook page posing naked as camaraderie and in a 'salute' to Prince Harry.
Monitoring, measuring, and responding to audience data in near real-time is one of the most powerful instruments at the disposal of a digital media organization. These tools are at the heart of the 'digital first' initiatives driving most of the newsrooms in the country. For example instead of the Sun editors or a bunch of elite pundits working off virtually no reliable data making guesses over why UK citizens were so interested in the Prince Harry naked photographs (representations of Britain abroad, revelations about his security provisions, etc) why not just ask them? The public were, after all, in the midst of viewing the images when the Sun was in the midst of debating publishing the images. How much stronger (or weaker) might a public interest defense have been from the Sun if they were able to represent data on why so many UK citizens were searching for and sharing the images while the PCC attempted to maintain its ban on UK publication. This type of polling and sentiment analysis in digital media can be done nearly instantly as demonstrated in so many political stories reflecting 'buzz' or sentiment about campaign issues. We might have been surprised by the results amidst the righteousness of attempting to define 'public interest' with the images already out there.
The Sun's decision to publish was an invitation for legal action. But despite all of the threats and indignation there was, naturally, no legal action taken against the newspaper for its apparent breach of privacy law and the PCC Code of Practice. So it was all bluster. What is the point of establishing such a clear code of practice if media organizations in clear breech are not penalized? It must have been obvious that it would have looked so naive to pursue the case with the images already splashed all over the Web. So why try and regulate it in the first place if media organizations can just flaunt the rules? My personal hope, though I am not optimistic, for one of the outcomes of the Leveson Inquiry is that it produces a starting point for progressive self regulation of these issues and recognizes the reality that until enforceable global regulation is a possibility, it is the publishers that will need to make these ethical decisions on public interest informed at least partially by the interest of the public when the content is readily available from abroad.
Leaving governments or public bodies to exclusively define privacy concerns is just as fraught with challenges as media self regulation. After all, who will watch the watchers? Privacy in digital media is a massive issue involving relatively poorly regulated and monitored lucrative electronic trails for businesses and sophisticated and still poorly understood surveillance of user activities by governments and law enforcement agencies around the world. The privacy of the reading material and the privacy of the reader are intertwined and inseparable. Essentially we need realistic, publicly and collaboratively developed, and globally aspiring digital media privacy and regulatory frameworks for a digital media era.

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Tech III

Hey everyone. Hope you're enjoying the break. Heads up regarding the schedule, it has changed and probably will change again before class, make sure to take a look. Here's the two articles to read before the presentation in our first class back. As always, time permitting we'll discuss final exam questions so come prepared:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-21274531
http://nakedsecurity.sophos.com/2013/01/30/hacker-blackmail-stripping-webcam/ 

'Sextortion' man charged over 'blackmailing women online'

  The accused is said to have blackmailed women into stripping off on webcam
A man who is said to have blackmailed more than 350 women after convincing them to strip off in front of their webcams has been arrested in the US.
Prosecutors said Karen "Gary" Kazaryan, 27, had hacked into hundreds of Facebook, Skype and email accounts to obtain naked or semi-naked pictures.
It is alleged he threatened to post the nude images of victims publicly unless they removed their clothing on camera.
If convicted, he could receive a maximum jail sentence of 105 years.
A press statement from the US Department of Justice detailed the charges against Mr Kazaryan, of Glendale, California.
Mr Kazaryan is said to have gained unauthorised access to hundreds of women's accounts, changing their passwords to prevent them from getting access.
"Once he controlled the accounts, Kazaryan searched emails or other files for naked or semi-naked pictures of the victims, as well as other information, such as passwords and the names of their friends," the statement said.
"Using that information, Kazaryan posed online as women, sent instant messages to their friends, and persuaded the friends to remove their clothing so that he could view and take pictures of them."
Skype capture US authorities said they had found about 3,000 pictures of nude or semi-nude women on Mr Kazaryan's computer.
Some of the images had been taken from online accounts, while others had been captured by Mr Kazaryan himself on Skype, they alleged.
"When the victims discovered that they were not speaking with their friends, Kazaryan often extorted them again, using the photos he had fraudulently obtained to again coerce the victims to remove their clothing on camera," the statement said.
The FBI said on some occasions Mr Kazaryan had gone through with his threat to publish the sensitive images.
He now faces 30 charges - 15 counts of computer intrusion, and 15 counts of aggravated identity theft.
The FBI described the alleged blackmail as "sextortion".
Shower trick In recent years, hackers have concocted ever more devious ways to coerce victims, or to spy on them unawares.
Writing in the Naked Security blog, Sophos researcher Graham Cluley recounted prior incidents.
In 2011, a Southern Californian man was sentenced to six years in prison for hacking into more than 100 computers - often posing as targets' boyfriends in order to obtain pictures.
Luis Mijangos, 32, said: "To all the victims I want to say that I'm sorry. I'm ready to do the right thing and stay out of trouble."
In July last year, Trevor Harwell, 21, was given a year-long jail sentence for setting up a ruse in which he convinced women that they needed to "steam" their webcams in order to fix a fault.
The easiest way to do this, Mr Harwell's "error" message explained, was by setting up the webcam near a shower.

Hacker blackmailed 350 women into stripping on their webcams, FBI says

The FBI has arrested a 27-year-old man, who they claim hacked the accounts of Facebook users, and coerced hundreds of women into stripping while he watched via Skype.
Karen "Gary" Kazaryan, of Glendale, California, was arrested yesterday on federal computer hacking charges.
According to a Department of Justice press release, Kazaryan is alleged to have broken into victims' email and Facebook accounts, changed their passwords, and searched for naked and semi-naked photographs.
Additionally, Kazaryan is said to have scooped up other information about his victims, including their passwords, names of their friends, and other personal details.
Posing as a woman, Kazaryan would allegedly trick other potential victims into believing they were talking to one of their female friends, and persuade them to remove their clothing in front of their webcam.
Kazaryan allegedly threatened to post nude photos of some of his victims on their Facebook pages if they refused to comply with his demands.
The FBI says that it has seized approximately 3,000 compromising photos from Kazaryan's computer, and believes more than 350 women may have suffered from what the FBI has described as "sextortion".
If convicted of all counts, Kazaryan could face up to 105 years in federal prison.
The FBI is urging all women who believe they might be a victim to contact the Los Angeles Field Office at (310) 477-6565.
How hackers use webcams to get their sexual kicks
Over the years, we've heard plenty of stories of hackers who have use webcams to spy on young women, and blackmail them into stripping or performing sexual acts.
For instance, in early 2005, Spanish authorities fined a student who captured movie footage from unsuspecting users, and arrested a 37-year-old man who spied on victims via a webcam while stealing banking information.
The following year, Adrian Ringland, from the English town of Ilkeston, Derbyshire, was sentenced to jail for ten years after admitting posing as a minor on internet chatrooms and using spyware to take explicit photographs via children's webcams.
And in 2008, a 27-year-old Canadian man was charged with using spyware to take over the webcams of women as young as 14 and coercing them into posing naked for him.
In 2011, a man from Southern California who hacked into over 100 computers, and used personal information stolen from them to extort sexually explicit videos of young women and teenage girls, was sentenced to six years in prison.
ShowerPerhaps the most eyebrow-raising incident I have heard of, however, is the case of the man who is alleged to have displayed error messages on his potential victims' laptop screens, tricking them into taking their webcams into the shower with them.
With many home users keeping poorly-defended PCs in their bedroom, there is clearly considerable potential for abuse - particularly amongst the young.
The message is simple: keep your PC protected against the latest threats with anti-malware software, security patches and firewalls, and if in any doubt unplug your webcam when you're not using it.
Suspected hackerPS. The good news is that sometimes webcam spying can backfire on the hackers.
In 2012, the Georgian government claimed it had linked an internet attack against its computers back to Russia's security services.
More than that, however, the Georgian government's CERT (Computer Emergency Response Team) turned the tables on a hacker they believed was involved in the attack, by secretly taking over his computer and taking video footage of him.
Maybe it would be a good idea if we all took more notice when the little green bulb on our webcam lights up..