Monday, 5 December 2011

Liam’s Code Of Journalism Ethics

In class when I asked guest speaker, Richard Waters, from the Financial Times what he felt the differences in ethics were between English and American journalist he gave me an answer that surprised me. “American journalists have far greater self imposed ethics codes” he felt that “English journalists are looking for ways around the rules imposed on them, making them more unethical”. This was interesting but also made me think that for me to construct a code of ethics without ever being a working journalist may give my guidelines the appearance of seeming over idealistic, but I will attempt to create one anyway being as realistic as I can.

1.     Firstly you should ‘Never Fabricate A Story’. Journalism is the art of truth and it is the journalists’ duty to the readers to give them, to the best of their ability, a factually accurate account of the events of the story.

2.     I do not believe in complete objectivity but I do believe a journalist can be fair, giving all the facts to paint a picture of wrong or right. I believe it is unethical to omit facts to give a false picture of an event.

3.     I believe it is unethical to use a headline that paints a false picture of a story, or take a quote from someone completely out of context.

4.     Photos that are used should never be photoshopped unless it is made 100% clear that the photo is not original or its maybe a comedy photo and it is made clear.

5.     The news should never be advertising there should be a clear line between the two. If there is advertising in the style of a newspaper layout it should be clearly labeled.

6.     Undercover journalism should be avoided unless it is in the best interest of the public, and you should always disclose you are a journalist if asked unless it puts you in danger. If you are recording people you should tell them so again unless the information is in the safety of the public.

7.     Be utilitarian in your approach to everything in journalism, do what helps the most while hurting the least, I feel this will help you stay ethical.

Wednesday, 16 November 2011

Wednesday, 2 November 2011

Ethics of undercover

Just a small piece on the ethics of undercover reporting I found online.

They talk about ethics is a hot-button topic in undercover reporting and that In general, undercover reporting is allowed only when the information to be obtained is of the utmost importance and when there's no other way to gain that information.


http://www.ehow.com/info_8185675_ethics-journalism-undercover-reporting.html 



Wednesday, 26 October 2011

I'll sing this in my midterm...


Again not ethical but pretty impressive to turn Kants categorical imperative into a song.

Thursday, 20 October 2011

Check your sources


My friend sent me this crazy story about a woman claiming to have gotten pregnant from watching a 3d pornography, but I thought it cant be a real story so I looked around the internet and found this website which said it was a joke story from Brazil which had been reposted all over the internet as fact.
I thought it was quite relevant to our ethics class that these site didn't check there sources when reprinting the story.


http://www.mediaite.com/online/brazilian-satirical-paper-tricks-american-news-outlets-into-believing-3d-pregnancy-story/

Wednesday, 12 October 2011

John locke in three minutes


not ethical but interesting

Publisher resigns after reports he pressured journalists into covering his papers business partner.

Publisher resigns after reports he pressured journalists into covering his papers business partner.

I thought this was an interesting ethical story, it also quite interesting to think are the journalists equally unethical for reporting the stories they were pressured to write?


http://www.poynter.org/latest-news/romenesko/149205/wall-street-journal-europe-publisher-resigns-after-deal-suggested-outside-influence-over-editorial-content/