December 15th, 2024

Group calls on Twitter to change label for public broadcasters in Canada, Australia

By The Canadian Press on April 20, 2023.

Twitter logos hang outside the company's offices in San Francisco, Monday, Dec. 19, 2022. A global journalism organization is calling on Twitter to correct its description of public broadcasters in Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Korean. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP-Jeff Chiu

A global journalism organization is calling on Twitter to correct its description of public broadcasters in Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South Korea.

The Global Task Force for public media – chaired by CBC president Catherine Tait – says calling four of its members “government-funded media” is misleading.

The group says Twitter applied the label without warning to the accounts of CBC/Radio-Canada; the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, known as ABC; the Korean Broadcasting System, or KBS; and Radio New Zealand, or RNZ.

It notes that Twitter’s own policy defines government-funded media as those that may have varying degrees of government involvement over editorial content.

The task force says that’s not the case here, where editorial independence is protected in law and enshrined in editorial policies.

It says the most accurate label would be “publicly funded media.”

Twitter initially labelled several accounts with the British Broadcasting Corporation “government-funded media,” but changed that to “publicly funded media” after the BBC objected.

The BBC is also a member of the Global Task Force, as well as France Télévisions, Germany’s ZDF and Sweden’s SVT.

“Labelling them in this way misleads audiences about their operational and editorial independence from government,” the task force said Thursday in a release.

The call follows efforts by Friends of Canadian Broadcasting to change CBC’s Twitter label. The group said Monday that it wrote to Twitter to say the designation is “incorrect and misleading.”

Tesla billionaire Elon Musk ushered in several changes after buying Twitter for US$44 billion last October.

He has also pledged to remove verified blue check marks for users who don’t pay a subscription.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 20, 2023.

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