Insights News Media Association calls for GDPR journalistic exemptions

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The News Media Association has called for robust implementation of the freedom of expression, freedom of information and journalistic exemptions to the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).

Responding to the Department for Culture, Media and Sport call for views, the NMA points out that news media could scarcely function without such exemptions and protections for their journalism.

These must now go beyond the protections of the Data Protection Act 1998”, the NMA says.  “They have to address the stringent requirements of the new regime, to enable freedom of expression, press freedom, open justice and access to information rights”, it added.

Otherwise, the NMA considers, “a mere assertion of inaccuracy might paralyse the media”.  Day-to-day reporting and investigative journalism would be “rendered impossible: and cross-border online news services “halted”.  Further, individuals and regulators could “delve at will into investigations” and “demand vast quantities of unpublished material”.  No source would be safe, according to the NMA.  “Archives would be censored as individuals tried to suppress past embarrassments”.

In addition, the NMA says, “legal actions would abound”, as data protection replaces libel as the preferred instrument of press control.  Representative legal actions could be brought by organisations to get compensation, without a mandate from the data subjects concerned, but with a chilling effect upon investigation and reporting.

Due to pan-European lobbying by News Media Europe and others, the GDPR mandates far-reaching exceptions to much of the new data protection regime.  It provides specific protections for journalism and for news archives, against the right to be forgotten.

The next stage of UK translation into the law and everyday operation will be crucial”, the NMA says.

The NMA is holding a free seminar on preparing for the GDPR, editorial and advertising, on 5 September 10am to 1pm at the NMA offices in London.  It will focus on the editorial and advertising impact of the GDPR and proposed changes to e-Privacy laws.  To read NMA’s press release in full and for further information on the seminar, click here.

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