Many journalists have been happy to tweet that they’ve downloaded the government’s COVID-19 app, effectively offering a public endorsement for software developed by a government that has raided and surveilled them to stop whistleblowing and silence sources revealing information in the public interest.
It’s their personal information, of course, so they can do with it whatever they like, but it makes it more difficult for them to assure those sources who wish to remain anonymous that they are doing everything they can to keep their communications confidential — unless they avoid using their phones for any interaction with sources, which is the best-practice method.
Phones, after all, are just a surveillance device that you can use for phone calls. Indeed a phone with bluetooth on and the screen permanently unlocked — which the COVID-19 app needs to function effectively — is a spy or a hacker’s wet dream.
Some in the media have gone further. They have compared people with privacy concerns to terrorists, to anti-vaxxers, or called them “Twitter cranks and contrarians”. One senior journalist described the app as a “test” for Australians.
Even those deeply concerned about the threat of government surveillance have argued that big tech companies are worse than any government app. Many outlets have reported with an air of triumph about the rapid take-up of the app, although there’s been less of that in the past 24 hours as the initial surge has faded.
The view of app advocates in the media is, perhaps, understandable: they want to play their part in getting Australia through this unprecedented — at least in the lifetime of anyone under 100 — crisis. They’re working for “Team Australia” because “we’re all in this together”. A little cheerleading for the government, if it helps improve uptake of the app, is worth it — after all “the life you save could be your own”, etc.
Journalists are being pandemic patriots rather than crisis curmudgeons.
One problem with this is that it essentially destroys the media’s argument against further extensions of government powers of surveillance and control in relation to national security matters. There is very little difference between public health and national security: in both cases the media must take the government’s word about the nature of the public threat, and in both cases governments claim the right to infringe basic freedoms and hide from scrutiny (remember the refusal to release modelling because it might frighten people?) on the basis of public interest.
Next time the government wants to give itself new powers to collect information, or surveil the population, or undermine cybersecurity, the mainstream media cannot object. Haven’t they led the way in urging the population to surrender some privacy for the public benefit against an insidious threat the government wants to protect us against?
Indeed, hasn’t the media compared privacy advocates to terrorists — a practice normally reserved for politicians who like to argue anyone resistant to the loss of basic freedoms is on the side of terrorists or pedophiles — and suggested they’re as delusional as anti-vaxxers? Aren’t the tech giants much much worse anyway?
The next extension of surveillance powers so the government can better track down journalists’ sources will be a test for the media: whose side are they really on?
The broader problem is that it’s not the media’s role to be pandemic patriots. It is the job of the media to hold the powerful — and particularly governments — to account. At a time when governments are handing themselves truly extraordinary powers of coercion and withdrawing basic freedoms from the population, this is more the case than at any time in recent decades.
When it proposes to place a surveillance app on the phone of — it hopes — the entire population, the case for vigorous interrogation of its proposal is especially strong.
Some ABC journalists, to their credit, have done their job. Linton Besser and Dylan Welch have exposed the fact that data from the app was within reach of US security agencies courtesy of far-reaching US laws that presume to override those of other countries.
In doing so they also exposed the distressing fact that Australian politicians and bureaucrats knew much less about US laws and their extraterritorial intent than journalists did.
This has been something of an exception at the ABC which has enthusiastically adopted a “Team Australia” approach to its coverage, including senior journalists criticising Australians for failing to rigidly adhere to the often absurdly draconian lockdown laws imposed by state governments.
It’s not merely the nature of the powers governments are arrogating during the crisis that necessitates journalists being watchdogs rather than cheerleaders.
The media itself, enduring an existential crisis that is smashing its beleaguered business model, faces a future in which it will be more dependent on government favours — via grants programs and regulatory relief — than at any time in its history.
The Australian commercial media’s future may very well depend on continued government support. This will be a dangerous time for accountability. Will media outlets balk at standing up for press freedom or challenging failed policy or corruption if they perceive it might endanger their success in the next grant round?
The times call for public interest journalism and vigorous watchdogs, not “Team Australia” and cheerleader journalists. And that call will only grow stronger as media revenue crumbles.
That’s the trouble with our media – that overly represented sold-out, lick-spittle component that has jettisoned their objectivity and bi-partisanship in trying to impress too many of their peers and this government, neither of which deserve such adulation. That have lost the character to hold government to account.
That element whereby the rest – that won’t call out that compromised cohort – are judged.
There are too few willing to do that calling to account – of both peers and government.
Probably why the likes of Keane, Rundle and such, are held in such disdain – by the likes of those the public hold in such general disdain?
May the old orthodox, money grubbing, bendoverforclients, advertising lies-drenched media collapse. May online types flourish, expand, grow, compete, develop, be searched and sifted. May we get some truth and sense. It takes a bloody long good search…
You took the words out of my fingers before they could hit the keyboard.
Bring. It. ON!
A Test hey? Well i didn’t download. I PASSED. i’M NOT A LICKSPITTLE!
I broke a life-time habit of watching ABC news programs between 7 and 8 after their supine, panic-stricken approach to Covid-19 in the early stages (The Dr Norman Swan Show – 24 hours of it!), followed by its excessive “Team Australia” cheerleading for totalitarian lockdowns. I’ve switched to SBS – why hadn’t I done so before, its so much better!)
Most of the media seems to have given up its role of asking questions and canvassing opinions, and merely parroted the views of whatever “expert” (who would have though there were so many epidemiologists out there?) they rolled out, provided they supported lockdowns of course! The only division seem to be between “go hard” and “harder, longer, stricter.”
And I wouldn’t exempt Crikey from that criticism (BK a mild exception). And I had such high hopes, too… Odd that I once thought they were a leftish, questioning bunch… Although yes, the bunker has finally broken ranks over the app*. About time.
* Oddly enough, I’ve downloaded it. I must be an irredeemable contrarian.
So what would you have done, compared to what the actual epidemiologist recommended? Which would have avoided us ending up like NY, London, Paris Milan …(wanted to go for NY, London, Paris Munich, every body loves…but that would have been poor taste).
I suspect that if it hadn’t been for the professional, convincing, pressure brought to bare by our epidemiologist and public health professionals that Scomo would not have been convinced to take the “Strong” leader action he has and would have joined the chart-topped of the carona stats..in fact I am pretty sure that if Vic and NSW hadn’t got together in a pincer movement we might be in a very different place.
This is besides the main point that the article makes. I wouldn’t trust this lot as far as I can kick em and that’s why I haven’t down loaded the app; not because I doubt the value from a public health perspective, but because I don’t trust this mob, or Amazon. So I’ll wait for the legislation to go through and then make my mind up based on the law that gets passed, not on what Scomo, #unt or anyone else says.
Quite agree El Dude (that this is off topic) – it’s just that I’m not sure crashing the world’s economy was the only option we had here… Sure, epidemiologists know a lot about their field of expertise, but (most likely) bugger all about economics and public policy. The catastrophists always point to NY, Italy and now the UK as our inevitable destiny without lockdown, but why? Why couldn’t we have been Taiwan, Hong Kong and South Korea? Or even Sweden?
We are going to have to learn how to live with the virus for quite some time, and yes, before this mythical vaccine arrives there will be many deaths. All will be tragic for their loved ones, but In the long months and years to come, as we grapple with all the intractable health and financial security issues brought on by a prolonged and deep Depression, as well as the inevitable political fallout from it – there will be a dramatic reassessment of what just happened in the fateful month of March, 2020 AD.
And back to BK’s point – our free media’s (if any of it is left) abject failure in examining what was actually going on.
The thought of being dependent of government favours – you mean like NewsCorpse? Where Truth goes to die?
Heavens to Murgatroyd, perish the thought.
I’ve used this quote from the great socialist, humanitarian, philanthropist and all round good guy, William Randolph Hearst previously but it bears repeating, as the only decent thing he ever said – or so it was attributed by Walter Winchell in 1930.
“‘News’, as Hearst once remarked, ‘is something which somebody wants suppressed: all the rest is advertising’.