Photo Credit: The Hindu
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The
PCI was set up in 1966 with the objective of preserving the freedom of press
and improving and maintaining the standards of press in India. The PCI currently
functions under the Press Council (Amendment) Act of 1970 that majorly changed
provisions with regard to the selection and appointment of members in the
Council. It has five members from the Parliament- three from Lok Sabha and two
from Rajya Sabha-apart from the Chairman and 23 other members. Since
journalistic standards cannot be maintained without regulating journalistic
practices in electronic and social media, it is imperative that the PCI should
exercise regulatory authority over all mediums involved in news reporting and
publishing.
However,
without sufficient authority to penalise and take disciplinary actions against deviant
journalistic practices in print media, it is not equipped to tackle press excesses
effectively in other media as well. Merely admonishing malpractice and imposing
fines has proven to be insufficient to maintain journalistic standards within
the fraternity. The members of the Council should thus be empowered enough to
take disciplinary actions jointly against journalistic malpractices.
The
argument of a self-regulating press fails in the wake of rampant malpractices
including paid news, selective or fake reporting, extortion, blackmailing, etc.
Secondly regulation does not imply control without accountability.
Rather,
in order to avoid abuse and misuse of power vested in an independent regulatory
body, clear metrics or quantitative parameters can be used to determine the
degree of deviance by media firms. This includes particulars about funding
received by the media organisation from clients buying media space or time slot
for advertisements as well as ownership patterns in media. Also, maintaining records
of news coverage might also help in identifying interest groups involved in
malpractices like paid news.
For
any disciplinary action taken against any firm thus, definite parameters for
taking such an action need to be specified in written and made public
whatsoever to ensure transparency and accountability of the statutory body.
Influence of Cross Media
Ownership
Freedom
of expression comes with the space for multiple opinions and views. With cross
media ownership, where a conglomerate owns multiple channels of communication
like newspapers, electronic media and digital media, this freedom rather
shrinks since there is concentration of the circulation capacity of a
conglomerate to disseminate one opinion. Moreover, contrary to popular belief
of multiple views available from multiple sources, content is majorly
determined and shaped by news trends generally initiated by one source but
eventually gaining visibility in other sources as well with marginal
differences. While this might be constructive and useful in some cases, there
are chances of replicating a publicity gimmick that is used as a marketing
strategy by most advertising agencies. Therefore, one needs to examine as to what
inspires or rather what interests lead to publishing and circulation of a news
report.
Need for alternate modes of
Revenue generation
Smaller
newspapers and dailies struggle to survive in the market as the industry mostly
recovers costs and derives profit from advertisements. This implies that
smaller newspapers and dailies with poor revenues and lower ad rates have to
function with limited resources too, which in turn has an effect on the quality
of news reports.
Therefore,
while prescribing a common standard for the industry, there is a need to delve
into fixing a common ad rate subject to market fluctuations. Moreover, other
traceable and justifiable mediums of revenue generation can also be explored. While India can boast of a flourishing
newspaper industry at a time when markets are declining in the United States
and United Kingdom, one need not neglect another trend, that is, the growth of media
and entertainment marked by an increase in advertising spend. In many ways, the
growth of the former can be said to have played a role in contributing to the
latter phenomenon.
Clash of interests
In
terms of identification of interests in the media industry as such, there seems
to be contradictory forces operating simultaneously. In other words, a service
oriented philanthropic ideal and its practice co-exists with commercial
interests. Wherever the scale shifts media, by virtue of the space it occupies
in the process of dialogue and communication, cannot naively eschew
responsibility of the content produced and circulated.
Conclusion
Lastly,
media has to be honest in acknowledging that to be misinformed is worse than
being uninformed. Consequently, misinformation needs to be made liable to
prosecution through regulation from an independent regulatory body on the basis
of clearly formulated and defined metrics.
Thus,
in order to have any real impact on industry practices and standards, political
thrust- both within the PCI and on the Parliament floors- is required to prioritise
and empower the PCI first and then include electronic media within its ambit.
Pallavi
Ghosh
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