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the JA Daily sells out netizens

 
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mack4289



Joined: 06 Dec 2006

PostPosted: Thu Jun 07, 2007 8:15 pm    Post subject: the JA Daily sells out netizens Reply with quote

This is a letter I sent to the JA Daily today. I've gotten published there a few times but I'd be surprised if this one gets in. I think it's worth a read, though.

Reading the JA Daily lately, I've noticed it takes an inconsistent stance on free speech. On the one hand, it takes a strong (and correct) stance against the government's effort to restrict media access but on the other hand, it doesn"t say a word in defense of free speech for internet users. Recently, I've seen articles in your paper that say the Seoul Central District Court will now hold websites liable for malicious (although not necessarily untrue) statements posted by users of those sites (May 19), that users will be liable for quoting a defamatory (although not necessarily untrue) news story (May 19), and that 4 to 5% of posts by internet users get deleted for having "irrelevant content with bad language" (although, again, not necessarily untrue) (May 19).

So why doesn't the JA Daily say a word in defense of the internet users? It can't be because the JA Daily doesn't understand the importance of user-created content. On April 30, the paper published an article that said that user-created content is going to become the dominant medium in the future. Could it be because the JA Daily doesn't want to see the competition strengthened?

If so, here's the flaw in that position. One of the biggest stories this year has been the arrest and indictment of Hanhwa Chairman Kim Seung. According to the May 14 edition of the JA Daily, the story never would've broken if not for the information that was provided on the internet, which the media wasn't allowed to provide. So your paper and the rest of the Korean media wouldn't have had one of the biggest stories of the year if not for the medium which your paper has yet to defend.

Still, incredibly, when those three stories about censoring the internet appeared on May 19, the only editorial regarding free speech on the internet in the JA Daily was one in favor of the Seoul Court's ruling, which never mentioned the possibility of suppressing free speech. Instead, it framed the issue as being all about the portal's responsibility for checking the accuracy of their news articles. Fair enough, but where was the defense of the user-created content that was so beneficial to this paper? I believe the JA Daily's readers, many of whom are likely generators of user-created content, deserve an explanation.
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koon_taung_daeng



Joined: 28 Jan 2007
Location: south korea

PostPosted: Fri Jun 08, 2007 12:06 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

All media and news agencies are a bunch of hypocritical pricks that contradict them selves on everavailabel occasion and NEVER do anything morally right if it will prevent them from making a dollar
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Captain Corea



Joined: 28 Feb 2005
Location: Seoul

PostPosted: Fri Jun 08, 2007 12:13 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'm confused, should the JA be supporting people rambling profanities on message boards?
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Ilsanman



Joined: 15 Aug 2003
Location: Bucheon, Korea

PostPosted: Fri Jun 08, 2007 1:01 am    Post subject: yes Reply with quote

Normally, I'd agree with the OP's rant, but like everything else in Korea, people here don't know how to do anything in moderation.

Considering the bad stuff and hateful comments that Korean netizens have done time and time again, its about time someone did something.
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mack4289



Joined: 06 Dec 2006

PostPosted: Fri Jun 08, 2007 3:30 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

The JA Daily should be supporting people rambling profanities because you can't support the kind of people who helped bring down the Hanhwa Chairman without supporting rambling, profane people. It's an unfortunate side effect of open society. Of course there are exceptions: even in the freest of countries, it's a crime to broadcast troop movements or the identites of undercover agents. And people should be protected against believable, malicious rumors whose sources know them to be untrue. But by and large, it's impossible to give strong protection to valuable speech without also protecting the dregs, and it's impossible to attack the dregs without also attacking valuable speech.
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mack4289



Joined: 06 Dec 2006

PostPosted: Sun Jun 10, 2007 10:45 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Lee Moo-young, National News Director of the JA Daily, responds to my letter:

Dear Mike Mackenna



Thank you for your comments on JoongAng Daily articles.

I will review the issue carefully.

But you should first separate news articles from opinions.

When we report news on a certain issue,

the reporting itself does not necessary mean we support a certain stance on the issue.



Personally, I strongly uphold the freedom of speech.

But I also strongly oppose the abuse of speech freedom, such as libel and privacy violation.

I think we should balance between free speech and privacy protection,

though it is not always easy to say when for free speech and when free speech.

That's why I am working as a journalist to advocate the freedom of speech

while avoiding abuse of the freedom.



If you have better ideas and opinions to tackle the issue,

please, feel free to tell me.



Sincerely yours,

Lee Moo-young

National news director of the JoongAng Daily


My response to him:

First Mr. Lee let me say thank you for the excellent article today about Joe McPherson. If things work out for him, you and the JA Daily will deserve some of the credit.

I understand that the news articles the JA Daily publishes aren't necessarily reflective of its opinion. But I think an editorial in defense of freedom of speech on the net is in the best interests of the JA Daily and media outlets everywhere and I'm disappointed that I haven't seen one from this paper. The internet and its users are only going to become more influential. We should be all fighting to ensure they continue to have the freedom to expose people like Hanhwa Chairman Kim Seung.

At the same time, opening up free speech has some bad side effects. As someone who's been to America, you've probably seen some of these bad side effects personally. But I still think that liberating free speech is better than restricting it, in almost every case.

Free speech will become an especially important issue for Korea when its economy opens up more. That's going to attract investors (Korean and foreign) who are going to want reliable information and they will have read the coverage of Kim Seung and they will be asking themselves, "If this guy can take some goons with him to beat up some people in a bar and almost get away with it (he probably would've if not for the now hamstrung internet sites), what else can they get away with? What if the bottom falls out and I never see it coming because their media isn't allowed to report it?"

If I were going to defend free speech on the internet and elsewhere, I'd focus on the investment angle. As you probably know, when you start talking about "open society" and "the right to free expression", people's eyes glaze over. But when you start talking about their money, people pay attention. If you can make it clear that opening free speech can ultimately make people richer by attracting greater investment, then you will have strengthened the case for free speech a great deal. Thank you for your time and your thoughtful response.
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