
Press Council should take quick action against those deliberately spreading fake news: Vice-President Dhankhar
The Hindu
“The Press Council of India [PCI] should take quick action against those deliberately spreading fake news and compromising professional ethics.”
Vice-President Jagdeep Dhankhar on Thursday said fake news, wrong and mischievous information, political ambitions and preferences, tendency to play power brokers, and monetary considerations, had eroded the people’s faith in the media.
“The Press Council of India [PCI] should take quick action against those deliberately spreading fake news and compromising professional ethics. It is not the time to show teeth but a time to bite. And the bite must be strong because those who are serving with high ethical standards must be encouraged only by those not doing so being visited with exemplary consequences,” he said while addressing a National Press Day event.
Mr. Dhankhar said: “Media is not a power centre or stakeholder in realpolitik. Ground reality is, it is doing everything under the sun to be a power centre -- not only a stakeholder, it seems to control it, seems to infuse it. It is so painful that some journalists have taken on themselves to change the course of democratic process contrary to the ground sentiments.”
Stating that the media’s duty was to tell the truth, the Vice-President said: “It is in their self-interest to be credible and trustworthy. It is time the media realises that their audience is turning away from them... actually, the expression ‘fake news’ has never been heard so loudly before as it is these days.”
On this year’s theme of the event, ‘Media in the Era of Artificial Intelligence’, Mr. Dhankhar said the technological advancements had presented unique challenges and ethical questions -- such as the spread of misinformation, deep fakes, creation of echo chambers, and micro-targeting of information to influence the democratic process and create chaos and instability in societies -- combined also with opportunities.
“Artificial Intelligence also has the potential... to dramatically alter the employment remark,” he said, adding that introduction of AI anchors and language models was threatening the jobs of hundreds.
“Facing these challenges, the responsibilities of journalists and media professionals have expanded, requiring an even greater commitment to the principles of truth, accuracy, and accountability...,” said the Vice-President. He said no disruptive technology could be a substitute for a well-informed, conscientious journalist. Although AI had the potential to harm, the media should acknowledge that the technology was here to stay and that it had to adapt, regulate and deal with it.