"The Mapping Digital Media research confirms that digital television and the internet have had a radical impact on media businesses, journalists, and citizens at large. As might be expected, platforms distributing journalism have proliferated, media companies are revamping their operations, and citi
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zens have access to a cornucopia of news and information sources. Other findings were less foreseeable: digitization has brought no pressure to reform state broadcasters, less than one-third of countries found that digital media have helped to expand the social impact of investigative journalism, and digitization has not significantly affected total news diversity. The Global Findings reveal other common themes across the world: Governments and politicians have too much influence over who owns, operates, and regulates the media. Many media markets are rife with monopolistic, corrupt, or untransparent practices. It’s not clear where many governments and other bodies get their evidence for changes or updates to laws and policies on media and communication. Media and journalism online offer hope of new, independent sources of information, but are also a new battleground for censorship and surveillance. Data about the media worldwide are still uneven, unstandardized, and unreliable, and are often proprietary rather than freely accessible." (Website Open Society Foundations)
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"This document is a working paper, written at the request of MC-S-PSB (Group of Specialists on Public Service Broadcasting in the Information Society). Its main purpose is to describe some of the key developments and trends in media, and to address
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the long list of challenging and often controversial issues confronting Public Service Broadcasting in coming years. A telling example of the profound nature of this change is the term broadcasting itself and its changing connotations. From its origins as a broad term covering communicative activity it is in the process of becoming merely a technical term for one of a number of distribution methods and technologies used by media companies. To avoid the risk of “Public Service Broadcasting” (PSB) being interpreted in this narrow sense of traditional terminology in this report it will be termed “Public Service Media” (PSM). What the report lacks in clear-cut answers will hopefully be compensated for by its plenitude of difficult and provoking questions. Many of them have been formulated and discussed in the course of fruitful debates with colleagues in media and academia and with members of the commissioning Group of Specialists of the Council of Europe." (Foreword, page 5-6)
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