(25-01-2012 16:13 )shylok Wrote: Read the this crook of shit and weep! OFCON won't be happy until they control the INTERNET too. Very scary stuff from our 'liberal democratic' government's junket loving thugs:
http://stakeholders.ofcom.org.uk/market-...audiences/
Thanks to Scotsman for finding a related speech reported on
melonfarmers
Quote:TV Censor suggests that video on demand should be censored more like TV than internet
Ed Richards, the boss of Ofcom made a speech to the Oxford Media Convention on the 25th January 2012.
He repeatedly alluded to more censorship for the internet and video on demand in particular. He said:
In between the twin poles of linear TV and the open internet, it becomes quite interesting.
When something looks, feels and acts like TV, but is delivered over the internet and into people's living rooms, we need something that meets audiences' expectations and provides the right degree of reassurance.
It is here that such services intersect with the views and concerns expressed by the participants in our research and where greater assurance than currently on offer may need to be considered.
It seems undesirable for these services to be subject to full broadcasting style regulation -- by and large they belong to a different form of service and come from a very different context. But we do need to consider whether to develop the approach in relation to existing co-regulation for video on demand to offer greater assurance and to ensure there is public trust in the approach to regulation as these services become more and more pervasive and significant.
In the case of video-on-demand services, our research shows that protection of minors and the risk of harmful content is the most likely focus. And our experience of broadcast regulation suggests that privacy and fairness for individuals are also areas that need careful exploration.
In this context I wonder therefore whether there may be a fairly simple opportunity to establish a core set of principles and aims which are held in common across a diverse media terrain with different regulatory environments.
Such a set of core principles could be established between the regulators that emerge from the current debate. They might aim to articulate the minimum standards which we would like to see in the UK, regardless of the nature of the service or its specific regulatory setting.
This is not as far-fetched as it may seem. The Ofcom Broadcasting code is remarkably close to the BBC's editorial guidelines. The PCC Code and the Ofcom Broadcasting Code share many of the same objectives, principles and indeed requirements, although the range of issues in the Ofcom Code is, for obvious reasons, significantly more extensive.
...
For starters, the reason the Ofcom code is similar to BBC guidelines is that the ITC Code shadowed it for many years and the BBC guidelines were regarded as a good model to follow, with some tightening up to allow for commercial pressures.
Next, Ed Richards takes credit for the sun coming up each morning. "The sun rising each morning is remarkably close to Ofcom staff coming to work each day."
The only reason we have broadcast regulation is that historically airwaves were in short supply. It was a very rare privilege to be granted a licence. Sky satellite and Virgin cable destroy that argument. Freeview weakens it.
That leaves the new argument that TV is somehow more persausive and more prevalant that pictures, books, magazines and newspapers, and therefore more dangerous.
My paper today has an article by Stephen Fry, the second most intelligent man alive and one of the most dignified, titled "In the library I discovered that being gay was a blessing". In it he recounts how he borrowed a book from his local taxpayer funded council run library about The Trials of Oscar Wilde, and that led his to read related books by Gide, Genet, Auden, Orton, Norman Douglas and Ronald Firbank. He read of man-love, boy-love and free-love. "For a gay youth growing up in the early 1970s a library was a way of showing that I was not alone." I for one dont believe that the books made him gay, just that the provided some reasurance. (Nor do I believe that the babe channels have some great cultural significance).
My point is this. He was 11 when he read his first Oscar Wilde book. Was the outcome so terrible? Can you imagine what Ofcom would do if it were to regulate libraries?