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Government Surveillance Is Crippling Press Freedoms, Report Shows
http://www.slate.com/blogs/future_tense/2013/10/10/committee_to_protect_journalists_report_shows_government_surveillance_hurting.html
The creep of government surveillance is beginning to take its toll on journalists.
Ryan Gallagher Ryan Gallagher
Thats according to a comprehensive new report on press freedom in the United States, published Thursday by the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists. The report is the first such effort by the CPJ in its 32-year history and was authored by the Washington Posts former executive editor, Leonard Downie Jr. (Downie is now a journalism professor at Arizona State University; ASU is a partner with Slate and the New America Foundation in Future Tense.)
The findings, based on interviews with reporters, editors, and government officials, present a startling picture of the deteriorating state of press freedom in the United States in 2013. The report suggests that the Obama administrations aggressive crackdowns on leaks of classified information are drying up sources like never before. And concerns about the governments power to snoop on communications appear to be having a toxic effect on journalists ability to function.
As Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington Post reporter Dana Priest says in the report, people think theyre looking at reporters records. Im writing fewer things in e-mail. Im even afraid to tell officials what I want to talk about because its all going into one giant computer.
Earlier this year, fears about potential government surveillance of journalists were amplified by cases involving reporters at Associated Press and Fox News. In two separate leak investigations, it was revealed that the Justice Department grabbed AP journalists phone records, while authorities snooped on the email inbox of a Fox News correspondent. Recent revelations about the scope of NSAs electronic spying programs have only added to the chilling effect. Though there is no evidence (yet) that the NSA has used its spy programs like PRISM and XKEYSCORE to monitor American reporters, that the agency receives a daily record of almost every domestic and international phone call made from the United States is likely enough to prompt most journalists to change how they communicate.
(more at link)
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