Editorial Independence

Editorial independence is the absence of external control or influence on journalists, authors, or media organisations in general.

It is tested, for instance, if a newspaper runs articles that may be unpopular with its advertising clientele or critical of its commercial owners or the state. The term is mostly used to denote media independence, and the freedom of the press.

"The media has increasingly grown to rely on automated decision-making to produce and distribute news. This trend challenges our understanding of editorial independence ..."

See also

Medienpolitik

What is Editorial Independence and How Does It Impact Publishing?

References


Tags:

AdvertisingArticle (publishing)Freedom of the pressJournalistMedia independenceNewspaper

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

2023 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournamentGoliad massacreGigi HadidChief executive officerMichael JacksonEarthOwen WilsonVincent van GoghMacaulay CulkinFranceMidjourneyEvan FergusonRuud van NistelrooyScotlandShazam! Fury of the GodsBlake LivelyScream (franchise)Wednesday (TV series)The Last of Us2024 United States presidential electionThe Help (film)Belarus2022 FIFA World CupPremier LeagueNeymarBRICSJeff GoldblumShadow and Bone (TV series)Bill GatesInternetGermanyJudy GarlandLiz ParnovResident EvilLux PascalAlbaniaMiley CyrusTom HanksAmerican Civil WarRussian invasion of UkraineKitty O'NeilMighty Morphin Power RangersDaniel RadcliffeLeonardo DiCaprio2023 Covenant School shootingHong KongJeremy Strong (actor)Google MapsJennifer ConnellyMacOSChris HemsworthMarie AntoinetteTenerife airport disasterFall (2022 film)Clancy BrownNicole KidmanPenn BadgleyJustine BatemanManchester United F.C.Nashville, TennesseeFast & FuriousList of James Bond filmsX (2022 film)Ian McShaneReese WitherspoonWiki FoundationTitanicSuki WaterhouseUEFA Euro 2024Roman EmpireSaudi ArabiaBrooke ShieldsLeo VaradkarOppenheimer (film)CherHamza Yusuf2011 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament🡆 More