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Interruption of a Presidential Press Conference by Some Television Broadcast Stations: Censorship or a Valid Innovative Measure to Combat Fake News?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 March 2022
Abstract
Censorship normally refers to the Government's actions to ban different forms of freedom of speech (i.e. suppression of words or images). However, cries of censorship were heard as a result of the decision taken by television broadcast networks to interrupt the transmission of a Presidential press conference in November 2020. Some interpreted this act as censorship against public authorities. Others thought it was a legal (and necessary) measure to combat fake news. This article addresses whether the decision to limit a televised broadcast by President Trump was censorship or, alternatively, whether it was a valid, innovative measure to fight fake news. To tackle these issues, it is necessary that some of the related duties and rights television broadcast stations have before the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), governmental authority in charge of these matters, must be revised.
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- Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by International Association of Law Libraries
Footnotes
This article is not a comprehensive study; it simply encourages others to reflect on the matter.
© JuanAndrés Fuentes 2021. The author would like to express gratitude to Professor Faye Jones, his mentor; Professor Edward Hart; and Mia Drut.
“No government ought to be without censors; and where the press is not free no one ever will.” (Thomas Jefferson)
References
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