Articles for tag: DSGVOEMFAJournalismusMedienfreiheitSLAPP

The GDPR’s Journalistic Exemption and its Side Effects

On 25 May 2023, we mark the fifth anniversary of the General Data Protection Regulation’s (GDPR) full application in the European Union (EU). While the Regulation is primarily known for its impact on business, it also fostered significant changes to data processing by media outlets, which are often overlooked in discussions about data protection. This blog post analyzes what is commonly called the ”journalistic exemption” under Article 85 of the GDPR that requires Member States to regulate the extent to which GDPR applies to journalists and others writing in the public interest. Further, this contribution reflects on how exactly that journalistic exemption is implemented across the Member States, and considers the problematic consequences of the GDPR’s uneven application to the media sector, including instrumentalization of GDPR in the strategic litigation (SLAPPs) against journalists.

Anti-terrorism regulation and the media in Uganda

Freedom of the media just like freedom of expression are provided for in the 1995 Constitution of Uganda, but spaces for exercising these rights are growing narrower by the day. The use of anti-terrorism regulation to suppress dissenting views reflects growing intolerance of criticism of President Yoweri Museveni’s regime. Foremost, legal and physical harassment from the authorities threaten privately funded media institutions and deter journalists from covering and interrogating certain issues.

Journalism on trial and the right to be forgotten

New rulings in Hurbain and Biancardi now permit complainants to address their "right to be forgotten" requests directly to the primary publisher. Journalists and the press, particularly the local press, play a fundamental role in democratic society, but they are already in a precarious situation, and the use of privacy to debilitate them also has a negative impact on local democracy. Hurbain has now been scheduled for a hearing before the Grand Chamber on 9 March 2022. It will have the opportunity to consider whether interference with the press was actually necessary in that case and, by implication, in Biancardi, and to restore the balance between privacy and freedom of expression under the right to be forgotten.

Der neue Politikjournalismus: Nichtlinear und visuell

Es war Mitte der Neunziger. Ich hatte gerade den Beschluss gefasst, Journalist zu werden. Ich stand mit einem etwas älteren Freund zusammen, der gerade als Volontär beim Bayerischen Rundfunk genommen worden war, und wir fantasierten über unsere aufregende politische Korrespondentenzukunft: Bonn! Washington! Moskau! Als ich „Brüssel!“ einwarf, zog mein erfahrenerer Freund ein Gesicht. Ach, Brüssel, sagte er. Brüssel ist doch keine Geschichte. Jeder weiß, dass die meisten Gesetze auf EU-Ebene entstehen. In Brüssel fallen die maßgeblichen Entscheidungen. Die Politik, die dort gemacht wird, ist für Deutschland und seine Zeitungsleser von ungeheurer Tragweite. Aber Brüssel ist keine Geschichte. Wir Politikjournalisten sind ... continue reading