Unfortunately, that "government-funded media" tag implies a lack of editorial independence:
> Government-funded media is defined as outlets where the government provides some or all of the outlet’s funding and may have varying degrees of government involvement over editorial content. [https://help.twitter.com/en/rules-and-policies/government-me...]
Yes, it says "may have" and not "has" but the implication is there, which is what the CBC & others are pushing back on. Twitter also has a "publicly-funded media" label which, in spirit, is probably more applicable, but the way the definition has been written, (I suspect it was written exclusively for the BBC), it doesn't apply to the CBC:
> Publicly-funded media refers to media organizations that receive funding from license fees, individual contributions, public financing, and commercial financing.
Twitter should remove "may have varying degrees of government involvement over editorial content" from the government-funded media label and call it a day.
> Unfortunately, that "government-funded media" tag implies a lack of editorial independence
Yes, Twitter should do away with mere implication and clarify that not only is it government funded, the president of the CBC is also appointed by government: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35605906
It's naive to think the government has no influence over editorial content. They may not have day to day influence, but so what, they wouldn't have had time to micromanage it even if they wanted to. Al Jazeera, TeleSUR or RT aren't micromanaged either.
No, the way to control media is to appoint a person you trust will cover the things you want to be covered, with the angle you want, and most importantly not cover the things you don't want to be covered. And this, they get to do. That's what Rupert Murdoch does too, and Jeff Bezos. None of them have to send out orders to kill a story - in the rare case their trusted appointees aren't sure, they can quickly and securely coordinate with similarly aligned media, or directly ask their patrons what they want. That's what they do for anything national security related in the US these days.
If something is funded by a government and employs folks, they will feel obligated to agree to some official government position. Even in germany this is observable.
Insofar I simply don't share your view, but this is fair to me. I can agree with your last sentence, it would probably be better this way.
1. It's not unique to government, this is exactly how, say, Rupert Murdoch or Jeff Bezos exercise their media power as well.
2. The sense of loyalty comes before the paycheck. You don't get to make decisions in the first place unless the people who appointed you are very confident that you see things their way.
Wouldn't the tag "independent journalist" make you dependent on Twitter? Following the analogy of "government funding necessarily means government influence", Twitter can give and take these labels arbitrarily (as they've done with NBC). Any independent journalist would be careful about stories on Twitter, since they might take away the tags, no?
True, but you don't need Twitter's permission to start doing journalism on Twitter (nor do you have to care much about how they label you).
You absolutely need NBC's permission before you can start doing journalism on NBC.
My whole point was that governments don't need to get heavy handed to get a compliant press, since they can engineer it up front. The important filtering of news happens not at the desk, but at the hiring.
They can call themselves editorially independent all they want but they know where their paychecks are coming from. It feels entirely like a thou doth protest too much situation.
> It feels entirely like a thou doth protest too much situation.
I can't disagree here. Of the labels described on the Twitter help page, "government-funded" fits the best. The CBC isn't funded by license fees of donations!
Google liberally sprinkled "state sponsored" tags around not that long ago in an attempt to sow skepticism of international news sources.
I thought their new-found ans self-appointed journalistic authority hubris at best and, more likely, an act of state-sanctioned retaliation. Perhaps it was even pay to play, or a quid pro quo to show they were cabinet material.
If anyone gave Google flack for this, it was buried by their truth orthodoxy squads under the guise of "algorithms".
>Yes, it says "may have" and not "has" but the implication is there, which is what the CBC & others are pushing back on.
And that pushback is a lie (I think the word these days is "misinformation"), because the Canadian government absolutely does influence what the CBC publishes.
Journalists (as a class) have begged for these rules and powers, and are now whining because they're now finding themselves at the pointy end. What's wrong with having to play by their own rules (which they claimed were good for everyone else)?
> A breakthrough study by University of Alberta researchers has shown the fat cells that lie just beneath our skin shrink when exposed to the blue light emitted by the sun.
I'm going to guess no. Blue light therapy maybe, if that's a thing.
My recovery plan: tarball & upload to Object Store. I'm going to check out exactly how much replication the OVH object store offers, and see about adding a second geographic location, and maybe even a second provider, tomorrow.
If your primary data is on OVH, I'd look at using another company's object store if feasible (S3, B2, etc). If possible, on another payment method. (If you want to be really paranoid, something issued under another legal entity.)
There's a whole class of (mostly non-technical) risks that you solve for when you do this.
If anything happens with your payment method (fails and you don't notice in time; all accounts frozen for investigation), OVH account (hacked, suspended), OVH itself (sudden bankruptcy?), etc, then at least you have _one_ other copy. It's not stuff that's likely to happen, but the cost of planning for it at least as far as "haven't completely lost all my data even if it's going to be a pain to restore" here is relatively minimal.
Looks like it's only the cosmic bodies formerly known as "Eskimo Nebula" (NCG 2392 [1]) and "Siamese Twin Galaxies" (NCG 4567 [2] and NCG 4568 [2] that are changing right now, but if anything else comes up, or if they have to refer to something with an offensive name they won't use the name.
> Government-funded media is defined as outlets where the government provides some or all of the outlet’s funding and may have varying degrees of government involvement over editorial content. [https://help.twitter.com/en/rules-and-policies/government-me...]
Yes, it says "may have" and not "has" but the implication is there, which is what the CBC & others are pushing back on. Twitter also has a "publicly-funded media" label which, in spirit, is probably more applicable, but the way the definition has been written, (I suspect it was written exclusively for the BBC), it doesn't apply to the CBC:
> Publicly-funded media refers to media organizations that receive funding from license fees, individual contributions, public financing, and commercial financing.
Twitter should remove "may have varying degrees of government involvement over editorial content" from the government-funded media label and call it a day.