... public interest. 1.10 In both news and comment, the press shall exercise exceptional care and consideration in matters involving the private lives and concerns of individuals, bearing in mind that any right to privacy may be overridden by a legitimate... Reporting in a Multimedia Worldby Barbara Alysen, Gail Sedorkin, Mandy Oakham, Roger Patching - 2003 - 312 pagesNo preview available - About this book
| Lucas M. Oosthuizen - Journalistic ethics - 2002 - 210 pages
...mind that any right to privacy may be overridden by a legitimate public interest. 1.11 A newspaper has wide discretion in matters of taste but this does not justify lapses of taste so repugnant as to bring the freedom of the press into disrepute or be extremely offensive to the public. 1.12 A newspaper... | |
| Franz Krüger - Journalism - 2004 - 308 pages
...drawn from the world of entertainment. But what of journalism? The press code says: 'A newspaper has wide discretion in matters of taste but this does not justify lapses of taste so repugnant as to bring the freedom of the press into disrepute or be extremely offensive to the public.' It's not a... | |
| Gwen Ansell - Language Arts & Disciplines - 2005 - 304 pages
...mind that any right to privacy may be overridden by a legitimate public interest. 1.11 A newspaper has wide discretion in matters of taste but this does not justify lapses of taste so repugnant as to bring the freedom of the press into disrepute or be extremely offensive to the pubic. 2. Discrimination... | |
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