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Online Reporters Now the Journalists Most Often Jailed

bckspc writes "The Committee to Protect Journalists today released the results of its annual survey of journalists in prison. For the first time, they found more Internet journalists jailed worldwide than journalists working in any other medium. CPJ found that 45 percent of all media workers jailed worldwide are bloggers, Web-based reporters, or online editors. Their chart of journalists jailed by year is also interesting."

10 of 147 comments (clear)

  1. Is this for REAL? by nulled · · Score: 5, Insightful

    People are going to JAIL for speaking their minds? In a blogging sense, this only clarifies that the Internet Blogosphere is being taken seriously. The ones in jail are probably blogging about anti-government related things, probably in countries where people are actually being killed. In countries like the middle-east, cuba or other very rough climated countries. But, the average blogger in UK. US, Australia and etc, blogging about how microsoft vista SUX, do not fit in this category. So, fear not bloggers, oh and BLOG ON.

    1. Re:Is this for REAL? by RobertinXinyang · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "The ones in jail are probably blogging about anti-government related things"

      Not always. I was threatened with jail for writing a book review (it really was a crappy book). The charge was "interfering with a trade good." The rational was that a book is an item offered for sale, thus a trade good. Writing a poor review of it had the potential of negatively impacting sales, thus interference.

      As I am sure you can guess (by the fact that I am here to post this) I pulled the book review and all mention of it and the author from my blog.

      So, it is not just anti-government things. In this case the book was a very poor workbook that intended to teach English though watching movies written by a total crank.

  2. Re:Lack of an editorial board. by abigsmurf · · Score: 3, Insightful
    It also results in insane amounts of slander and libel. Rumours get posted as fact, fact checking is non-existant (is your average joe blogger really likely to have contacts who would be able to officially deny or confirm something?).

    Reading blogs is often like reading a trashy tabloid, only they're even more comfortable posting outright lies.

    Blogs can make a good starting point for finding info on something but overall they generally only post stuff that doesn't appear in papers or news channels because they lack the quality control or journalistic integrity of news organisations.

  3. Re:Getting up on the cross again, I see by pzs · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Are you using the fact that some journalists are arse-holes to justify curtailing freedom of speech? That's mental.

    The principle of press-freedom is separate from how that freedom is used in individual cases. That freedom is an absolutely vital component of a healthy democracy, because it means that corrupt or self-serving officials always have the fear that what they do will be uncovered and made public.

    Yes, some journalists are whiny bitches. However, we must fight with all our might to protect their freedom to make a fuss.

  4. Re:yebbut - this isn't what most journo's do by terrahertz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You seem to miss the point that no matter how disposable yellow journalism might be, the types of stories that get journalists arrested are the ones that you and I, regular people, typically need to hear about in order to be informed participants in modern society. Do you really think China is jailing its journalists for "shrill bloat"?

    --
    Slashdot? Oh, I just read it for the articles.
  5. proud of the west by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Insightful

    you can't slander the king in thailand, you can't talk about nazism in germany, you can't besmirch attaturk in turkey, you can't question islam most anywhere islamic, you dare not question the technocrats in china, you dare not be a journalist writing stories critical of the kremlin in russia, you dare not question the tinpot dictator in autocratic countries, etc., etc., etc.

    but in much of the west: canada, australia, the usa, i can, for example, call gw bush a fucking moron, and i haven't the faintest doubt nothing bad will come of me for that

    that reallty means something in this world

    and you who question my pride in the west for this freedom: you have something you wish to criticize about the west and its behavior?

    ok. go ahead

    thereby further proving my point ;-)

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  6. Re:Henry David Thoreau & Ghandi by ErikZ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Thoreau didn't have a wife and kids. His job was living in Ralph Waldo Emerson's house.

    It's easy to make a stand when you're taking no risks and no one depends on you.

    --
    Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
  7. Re:yebbut - this isn't what most journo's do by sorak · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I had a similar thought, but we're not talking about WorldNetDaily or Matt Drudge...

    (From TFA)

    China continued to be world's worst jailer of journalists, a dishonor it has held for 10 consecutive years.

    The article goes on to mention other countries, such as Cuba. So, in the most oppressive nations on Earth, people saying illegal things do it on the internet, instead of television or radio...

    It doesn't seem very surprising when put in that context...

  8. Re:yebbut - this isn't what most journo's do by jafiwam · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Do us all a favor o graciously arrogant one, and share with us your omnipresent definition of a journalist, be sure to highlight in particular the part that clearly carves out a blogger as not being a journalist.

    Oh, and fuck off too.

  9. Re:Lack of an editorial board. by abigsmurf · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The trouble is, they don't say things 'as they are' they say things that fit in with their view. At least with with newspapers, the fact they'll get sued means they have to reign in their viewpoints. With bloggers they don't have to (or at least don't feel the need to).

    They'll twist any story to meet their means any if they need to add cridibility to their viewpoint, 10 minutes on google will find you a view by someone who is incredibly qualified that will match the point you're trying to make. No matter how stupid.

    The US election and the primaries brought out the very worst in the blogosphere. Take the whole Ron Paul fad. A commodity backed economy cannot and does not work in a global economy (evidenced by the fact that not a single country does it and the last attempts to create one failed). However suddenly everyone on the blogosphere who went crazy after Ron Paul went into overdrive. They found books that backed him, they found economists they'd never heard of before and built them up to be incredibly famous, powerful people who are never wrong.

    Bloggers are after their scoop. They'll scan speeches for out of context quotes, twist around statistics, post slight glimmers of rumours as major exclusives. All so they can get Dugg or Reddit or whatever.