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TV
codes out of date in streaming era, communications
watchdog warns - June 29, 2022

By
Lisa Visentin
Australias
media regulator is urging broadcasters to update their
codes of practice and develop new rules to cover online
services such as live-streaming and catch-up TV, as
data shows more Australians are watching on-demand
content than ever before.
In
a position paper released on Wednesday, the Australian
Communications and Media Authority concluded the nine
broadcasting industry codes covering free-to-air and
commercial TV and radio were out of date, calling
for them to be expanded to cover online platforms.
Many
of the industry codes had not been updated for years,
ACMA found, and most current codes of practice
do not apply to online content, even when that content
appears on a broadcasters live-streamed, catch-up
or on-demand platform.
But
the authority stopped short of recommending explicit
changes to the codes. It instead identified a range
of core audience expectations in areas
such as accuracy and impartiality, stating that providers
should prevent the amplification or spread of misinformation
and disinformation.
The
absence of misinformation provisions in the industry
codes came to the fore last year, amid a furore over
YouTubes decision to suspend Sky News from using
its platform for breaching its COVID-19 misinformation
policies. This prompted a debate about whether the
tech giant was better equipped than ACMA in addressing
misinformation spread through traditional broadcast
mediums.
For
the first time, Australians watched more video content
online via subscription services in any given week.
In
the paper, ACMA also identified an increased
level of public concern about the welfare and wellbeing
of people who participated in shows such as
reality TV programs.
It
suggested a best-practice approach would
ensure that ordinary individuals who participate
in content are fully informed about the implications
of their involvement before they agree to participate.
The
paper also noted that while all the industry codes
prohibited content that was discriminatory or incited
hatred, to be considered in breach it often had to
pass a threshold of intense dislike, serious
contempt or severe ridicule.
ACMA
said complaints it had received under these provisions
suggested this was out of sync with community expectations.
For
example, existing rules may not adequately recognise
or account for the cumulative effect of discriminatory
or highly offensive content that, over time, may increase
harms to targeted individuals/groups as well as the
broader community, the paper said.
In
a separate research report, ACMA found that in 2021,
for the first time, Australians watched more video
content online via subscription services in any given
week (58 per cent) than via traditional broadcast
TV (54 per cent).
With
the rapidly changing content environment, we consider
there is an urgent need for broadcasters to apply
content rules consistently across their multiple delivery
platforms so that all their audiences are afforded
similar protections, ACMA chair Nerida OLoughlin
said.
She
said the authority expected broadcasters will
take this research into account when reviewing and
updating their respective co-regulatory codes of practice.
ACMA
oversees a co-regulatory regime established by the
Broadcasting Services Act 1992, which requires Australian
broadcasters to develop industry codes of practice
that establish content safeguards for their TV and
radio audiences.
The
codes do not cover streaming services such as Netflix,
Stan and Disney+.
Free
TV Australia, the lobby group for commercial broadcasters
Seven West Media, Network Ten and Nine (which shares
a parent company with this masthead), said its broadcasters
were proud of our commitment to ensuring community
standards.
We
look forward to engaging with the ACMA on the issues
raised in their position paper, chief executive
Bridget Fair said.
(The
Sydney Morning Herald)
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