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2/7/2019 Media regulation - Wikipedia

Media regulation
Media regulation is the control or guidance of mass media by governments and other bodies. This regulation, via law,
rules or procedures, can have various goals, for example intervention to protect a stated "public interest", or encouraging
competition and an effective media market, or establishing common technical standards.[1]

The principal targets of media regulation are the press, radio and television, but may also include film, recorded music,
cable, satellite, storage and distribution technology (discs, tapes etc.), the internet, mobile phones etc.

Contents
Principal foundations
By country
Egypt
China
The European Union
Norway
United Kingdom
United States
Criticism
See also
References

Principal foundations
Balance between positive and negative defined liberties.

The negative defined liberties, legislating the role of media institutions in society and securing
their freedom of expression, publication, private ownership, commerce, and enterprise, must be
balanced by legislation ensuring the positive freedom of citizens of their access to information.

Balance between state and market.

Media is at a position between the commerce and democracy.

These require the balance between rights and obligations. To maintain the contractual balance, society expects the media
to take their privilege responsibly. Besides, market forces failed to guarantee the wide range of public opinions and free
expression. Intend to the expectation and ensurance, regulation over the media formalized.[2]

By country

Egypt

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Egypt's Supreme Council for Media Regulations (SCMR) will be authorised to place people with more than 5,000
followers on social media or with a personal blog or website under supervision. More than 500 websites have already been
blocked in Egypt prior to the new law in 2018.

China
At the early period of the modern history of China, the relationship between government and society was extremely
unbalanced. Government held power over the Chinese people and controlled the media, making the media highly political.

The economic reform decreased the governing function of media and created a tendency for mass media to stand for the
society but not only authority. The previous unbalanced structure between powered government and weak society was
loosed by the policy in some level, but not truly changed until the emergence of Internet. At first the regulator did not
regard Internet as a category of mass media but a technique of business. Underestimating the power of the internet as a
communications tool resulted in a lack of internet regulation. Since then, the internet has changed communication
methods, media structure and overthrown the pattern of public voice expression in China.

Regulators have not and would not let the Internet out of control. In recent years, the strategy when approaching the
Internet has been to regulate while developing.

The internet regulation in China generally formed by:

Legislation

China is the one who owns the greatest amount of legislation in the world. According to
statistics, up to October 2008, 14 different departments such as the NPC of China, the Publicity
Department of the Communist Party of China, and the State Council Information Office, had
been published more than 60 laws related to internet regulation.[3]

Administration

Internet regulation departments in China have respective distribution of work. Ministry of


Industry and Information Technology is responsible for the development and regulation of the
industry, Ministry of Public Security regulates security and fights crimes, and the Propaganda
Department leads the system where departments of culture, broadcasting, journalism,
education, etc. regulates the information contents.[4]

Technical control

The Internet regulation departments restrain the wrongful expression and behaviors by
techniques such like blocking information negative to social stable and carrying out real name
system through Internet.

Agenda control

It requires communicators to set up the relationship between expected information targets and
the real targets, guide the direction of information to reach the expectation.

Structure adjustment

Traditional media affiliated into government strives to develop Internet with relatively flexible
administrating system to increase the communicating power of mainstream media of authority to
compete with social communication.

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Training

Regulator delivers the expectation of Internet environment to the population through training
and educating to intense people’s conscious about behavior norms.

The European Union


Most EU member states have replaced media ownership regulations with competition laws. These laws are created by
governing bodies to protect consumers from predatory business practices by ensuring that fair competition exists in an
open-market economy. However, these laws cannot solve the problem of convergence and concentration of media.[5]

Norway
The media systems in Scandinavian countries are twin-duopolistic with powerful public service broadcasting and periodic
strong government intervention. Hallin and Mancini introduced the Norwegian media system as Democratic
Corporatist.[6] Newspapers started early and developed very well without state regulation until the 1960s. The rise of the
advertising industry helped the most powerful newspapers grow increasingly, while the little publications were struggling
at the bottom of the market. Because of the lack of diversity in the newspaper industry, the Norwegian Government took
action, affecting the true freedom of speech. In 1969, Norwegian government started to provide press subsidies to small
local newspapers.[7] But this method was not able to solve the problem completely. In 1997, compelled by the concern of
the media ownership concentration, Norwegian legislators passed the Media Ownership Act entrusting the Norwegian
Media Authority the power to interfere the media cases when the press freedom and media plurality was threatened. The
Act was amended in 2005 and 2006 and revised in 2013.

The basic foundation of Norwegian regulation of the media sector is to ensure freedom of speech, structural pluralism,
national language and culture and the protection of children from harmful media content.[8][9] Relative regulatory
incentives includes the Media Ownership Law, the Broadcasting Act, and the Editorial Independence Act. NOU 1988:36
stated that a fundamental premise of all Norwegian media regulation is that news media serves as an oppositional force to
power. The condition for news media to achieve this role is the peaceful environment of diversity of editorial ownership
and free speech. White Paper No.57 claimed that real content diversity can only be attained by a pluralistically owned and
independent editorial media whose production is founded on the principles of journalistic professionalism. To ensure this
diversity, Norwegian government regulates the framework conditions of the media and primarily focuses the regulation on
pluralistic ownership.

United Kingdom
Following the Leveson Inquiry the Press Recognition Panel (PRP) was set up under the Royal Charter on self-regulation of
the press to judge whether press regulators meet the criteria recommended by the Leveson Inquiry for recognition under
the Charter. By 2016 the UK had two new press regulatory bodies, the Independent Press Standards Organisation (IPSO),
which regulates most national newspapers and many other media outlets, and IMPRESS, which regulates a much smaller
number of outlets but is the only press regulator recognised by the PRP (since October 2016).[10]

Broadcast media (TV, radio, video on demand), telecommunications, and postal services are regulated by Ofcom.[11]

United States

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The First Amendment to the United States Constitution forbids the government from abridging freedom of speech or
freedom of the press. However, there are certain exceptions to free speech. For example, there are regulations on public
broadcasters: the Federal Communications Commission forbids the broadcast of "indecent" material on the public
airwaves. The accidental exposure of Janet Jackson's nipple during the halftime show at Super Bowl XXXVIII led to the
passage of the Broadcast Decency Enforcement Act of 2005 which increased the maximum fine that the FCC could level
for indecent broadcasts from $32,500 to $325,000—with a maximum liability of $3 million. This is to shield younger
individuals from expressions and ideas that are deemed offensive. The Supreme Court of the United States has yet to
touch the internet, but that could change if net neutrality comes into play. [12]

Criticism
Anthony Lowstedt and Sulaiman Al-Wahid suggested that the authority need to issue diverse media laws centering at anti-
monopoly and anti-oligopoly with democratic legitimacy since media outlets are important for national security and social
stability. The global regulation of new media technologies is to ensure the cultural diversity in media content, and provide
a free space of public access and various opinions and ideas without censorship. Also, the regulation protects the
independence of media ownership from dominance of powerful financial corporations, and preserves the media from
commercial and political hegemony.[13]

In China, the possibility that a film approved by Central Board of Film Censors can be banned due to the disagreement of a
specific leading cadre has never been eliminated. The Chinese screenwriter Wang Xingdong stated that regulation over
literature and art should be based on laws and not the preference of some individuals. In the field of media, relative
legislation must be introduced as soon as possible and applied strictly to avoid the case that some leaders overwhelm the
law with their power to control the media content.[14]

See also
Censorship
Communications law
Federal Communications Commission
Freedom of the press
Leveson Inquiry
Media policy
Media law
Media manipulation
News media
Royal Charter on self-regulation of the press (UK)
Unlicensed broadcasting
Net Neutrality

References
1. "What is media regulation?" (http://www.le.ac.uk/oerresources/media/ms7501/mod2unit11/page_01.htm). Media
Regulation. Leicester: University of Leicester. Retrieved 29 November 2012.
2. Sjøvaag, H. (2014). "THE PRINCIPLES OF REGULATION AND THE ASSUMPTION OF MEDIA EFFECTS". Journal
of Media Business Studies: 5–20.
3. 李, 永刚 (2009). 我们的防火墙. 桂林:广西师范大学出版社. p. 75.
4. 温, 云超 (April 2009). " "我们的意志是乐观的":中国另类传播的生机就在夹杀中". 新闻学研究: 261–264.
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5. Harcourt, Alison; Picard, Robert. "POLICY, ECONOMIC, ANDBUSINESS CHALLENGES OFMEDIA OWNERSHIP
REGULATION" (https://www.academia.edu/3632449/Policy_Economic_and_Business_Challenges_of_Media_Owner
ship_Regulation). academia.edu. Jönköping International Business School. Retrieved 26 April 2015.
6. Hallin, D.; Mancini, P. (2004). Comparing Media Systems: Three Models of Media and Politics. Cambridgeshire:
Cambridge University Press.
7. "Medienorge" (http://medienorge.uib.no/english/?cat=statistikk&medium=avis&queryID=193). MiediaNorway.
Retrieved April 5, 2015.
8. Syvertsen, T. (2004). "Eierskapstilsynet – en studie av medieregulering i praksis [Ownership oversight: A study of
media regulation in practice]".
9. Krumsvik, Arne (2011). "Medienes privilegier – en innføring i mediepolitikk [Media Privileges: An Introduction to Media
Politics]".
10. "Panel Gives Alternative Press Regulator Royal Charter" (http://www.pressgazette.co.uk/press-recognition-panel-give
s-alternative-press-regulator-impress-royal-charter-backing/). Press Gazette.
11. "What is Ofcom?" (https://www.ofcom.org.uk/about-ofcom/what-is-ofcom). Ofcom. Retrieved 2018-01-19.
12. Biagi, Shirley. Media/Impact: An Introduction to Mass Media. Cengage Learning. p. 319. |access-date= requires
|url= (help)
13. Löwstedt, Anthony; Al-Wahid, Sulaiman (2013). "Cultural diversity and the global regulation of new media
technologies". International Journal of Media & Cultural Politics. 9: 195–200.
14. "王兴东建议:加快立法根治电影审查"以言代法" " (http://news.xinhuanet.com/2015-03/02/c_1114484352.htm). 新华网.
2 March 2015.

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