« Virginia Courthouse First-Come, First-Served Display Policy Produces Eclectic Scene | Main | First Amendment Scholarship Update »
December 22, 2010
Hungary: new media law raises free speech concerns
The OSCE Media Rep expressed concern about a new "Law on media services and mass communication", that was adopted by the Hungarian Parliament on 20 December. From the OSCE press release:
"The law regulates all media content - broadcast, print and online - based on identical principles, which runs against OSCE standards on free media. It also gives unusually broad powers to the recently established media authority and media council, which are led exclusively by members supported by the governing party," Mijatovic said.
Traditionally, regulatory authorities govern broadcast media only, but the new law in Hungary empowers the authorities to also govern print and online media content.
"Such concentration of power in regulatory authorities is unprecedented in European democracies, and it harms media freedom," Mijatovic said. "Regulating print media can curb free public debate and pluralism. Even though regulating online media is considered technologically impossible, it introduces self-censorship."
December 22, 2010 | Permalink
TrackBack
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341bfae553ef0147e0edcdf7970b
Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Hungary: new media law raises free speech concerns:
