| |
|
Important Win for Adbusters
2009-04-10 13:39:06 Posted
by: ragaman7 Category: Digital Rights
ADBUSTERS WINS A LEGAL VICTORY AGAINST CANADA'S MEDIA GIANTS, LEGAL ACTION IN THE US MAY BE NEXT
After 15 years of legal tussling to bring democracy to the public airwaves, Adbusters has finally scored a great victory. The Supreme Court of British Columbia has granted us an appeal in our landmark case against Canada's CBC and Canwest Global, giving us the go-ahead to set a precedent and establish some public rights over the airwaves.
People are spending an unparalleled 8.5 hours per day in front of screens and even with the influx of new screen formats – cell phones, computers, Kindle – TV is still dominant. It’s the most powerful social communications medium of our time. And yet it is a place where commercial imperatives rule and dissenting voices are routinely censored. Adbusters’ attempts to purchase airtime from major commercial broadcasters for its socially-minded public service spots have been repeatedly denied over the years.
The airwaves are public property – just like city sidewalks or parks. They are a public space where freedom of speech must prevail. This is an inspiring idea for media activists and could pave the way for further legal victories down the road not only on the TV airwaves, but in cyberspace as well.
Not surprisingly, none of Canwest’s 13 daily newspapers or 23 TV channels covered the appeal court ruling. The silence has been deafening. Canadians citizens should be aware that the largest media conglomerate in our country is censoring the news to suit its own interests.
Here’s who did cover the story: CBC Radio, the Globe and Mail, the Georgia Straight and the Tyee.
CBS, NBC, ABC, FOX, MTV and the Food Channel have also repeatedly refused to sell us airtime over the past 15 years and we would like to launch a freedom of speech legal action in the US. If you know an American lawyer who may be interested in being part of our legal team then let us know, email kono@adbusters.org.
The endgame will be a series of lawsuits around the world forcing the half a dozen media megacorporations controlling the bulk of news and entertainment flows around the planet to return some control back to the public.
Email kono@adbusters.org if you want to talk strategy or contribute to our legal war chest. UPDATE |
| |
|
|
|
|
Post
Blogs
Remixd
Digital Rights Ireland
Political Remix Video
This & That
Wreck & Salvage Blog
Imaginify.org
blogonandon
stanislas kazal underground blog
Niall Larkin
Recycled Cinema
Remix Theory
Art Threat
Lessig
JD Lasica
Blogorragh
Boing Boing
Darknet
Damien Mulley
Add a Blog
Categories
Remix Culture
Digital Rights
Copyright
Education
Business
Politics
Technology
Movies/TV
FilmMaking/Editing
Other
Recommended Reading
Add a Book

Pirate Cinema
Cory Doctorow

Republic, Lost: How Money Corrupte Congress -- And a Plan to Stop It.
Lawrence Lessig

Digital Copyright
Jessica Litman

The Video Vortex Reader
Edited by Giert Lovink and Sabine Niederer

Hillman Curtis on Creating Short Films for the Web
Hillman Curtis

Remix: Making Art and Commerce Thrive in the Hybrid Economy
Lawrence Lessig

Art of the Start
Guy Kawasaki

The Art of Innovation: Lessons in Creativity from IDEO, America's Leading Design Firm
Tom Kelley and Tom Peters

The Pirate' Dilemma
Matt Mason

Fans, Bloggers, and Gamers: Media Consumers in a Digital Age
Henry Jenkins

Promises to Keep
William W. Fisher

Copy Fights: The Future of Intellectual Property in the Information Age
Adam Thierer

The Future of Music
David Kusek, Gerd Leonhard

Freedom of Expression
Kembrew McLeod

The Future of Ideas
Lawrence Lessig

The Long Tail
Chris Anderson

The Cult of the Amateur
Andrew Keen

Convergence Culture
Henry Jenkins

Darknet: Hollywood's War Against the Digital Generation
JD Lasica

Free Culture
Lawrence Lessig
|
|
|