Rules for the Media: Independence, Transparency, Accountability, Comparative Reporting
Published on OctĀ 10, 2015 (updated FebĀ 5, 2024), filed under misc, advocacy (feed). (Share this on Mastodon orĀ Bluesky?)
Eh. This isnāt how Iād put it anymore these days, but Iām willing to keep this article up to show how idealistic (or naive) Iāve been at times.
Iāve suggested to opt out of following news for the simple reason that ānewsā rarely constitute reliable and actionable informationābut instead misinformation and disinformationā, and in the spirit that even ignorance may be preferable so to at least keep an open mind.
What would make me change this view? After all, we may not be able to ever have entirely trustworthy mediaānot in our current economic system, and not as long as the media rely heavily on a) advertising and b) the very people theyāre supposed to inform about.
In a daring sketchāas so often hereā, I think the media need more independence, transparency, accountability, and what Iāll call comparative reporting.
Independence
There will always be a degree of dependence for the media, as probably Noam Chomsky explains best (Iām already presumptuous enough). At the very least, governments may always be able to āguideā the media in their reporting, and to give them āflak.ā
However, thatās not to say that we have to accept that media set themselves up to depend more or less on a single source of funding, one that at some point makes for a conflict of interest (as with advertising); and neither should this mean that several media may belong to one individual or company. The potential of abuse is too high; the media would not be independent.
Transparency
What the cypherpunks demand with āprivacy for the weak and transparency for the powerfulā applies also to the media. The media should go out of their way to demonstrate where they get their information from and how they drew their conclusions; that does not mean to give up all sources (we need strong whistleblower protections) but to do whatās possible to avoid any impression of biased reporting that may stem from conflicts of interest.
Accountability
We then need accountability, we then need media to take responsibility for their reporting. Like most here this requires differentiation and tact, and so we should not demand heads to roll for every editorial mishap, but that there are (again transparent) ways to hold the media accountable. That should absolutely not be akin to government control in terms of curbing rights of the press, but it may entail fines, the obligation to publicly correct and apologize for statements, and demotions. My thinking here is governed by the idea that thereās always something we can do.
Comparative Reporting
Another critical change relates to reporting itselfāit must, for once, be comparative. What we know in information design, where we, ever since Tufte at least, insist charts to answer ācompared to what?ā, applies to news just as muchāif not more. We need context to understand whatās really going on.
Reporting that there were 200 accidents in the last month in a town of 1,000 people is different from 200 accidents in the last year in a city of 20,000,000. And so is whether 1 plane crashes of 3 that took off yesterday, or the 100,000,000 having taken off in the last year. Or whether an athlete earns 20 times more the average salary of his country, or half of the league average. We may be bad with numbers, but weāre not bad at comparison. We need to be enabled to compare, and media just throwing numbers and statements at us are not only negligent but pretty much worthless.
ā§ As so often on these pages, this is a cheeky sketch, some ideas poured into paragraphs. And yet the points should come across, that there may be things we can do to keep our media alive, to be able to trust them more. And these things could start with more independence, transparency, accountability, and comparisons.
About Me
Iām Jens (long: Jens Oliver Meiert), and Iām a web developer, manager, and author. Iāve been working as a technical lead and engineering manager for companies youāve never heard of and companies you use every day, Iām an occasional contributor to web standards (like HTML, CSS, WCAG), and I write and review books for OāReilly and Frontend Dogma.
I love trying things, not only in web development and engineering management, but also in other areas like philosophy. Here on meiert.com I share some of my experiences and views. (I value you being critical, interpreting charitably, and giving feedback.)