Stanley E. Flink is the author of the new book Due Diligence and the News: Searching for a Moral Compass in the Digital Age. His other books include Sentinel Under Siege. A longtime journalist, he also taught at New York University and Yale University. He lives in Connecticut.
Q: Why did
you decide to write this book, and who did you see as the ideal readership?
A: I taught
a seminar called “Ethics and the Media” for more than 30 years, starting at NYU
Journalism School and then at Yale University. I became increasingly aware, during
that period, how little the students knew about early American history, the
Constitution, and the ethical principles of journalism.
I decided to
compile a series of essays that lay out key events, and seminal views, in the
history of free expression in America. This took me from the colonial years to
the modern digital era. Some issues endure, others enter through the digital instruments.
The
transition from traditional media to the large data platforms is both dramatic
and complex. Artificial intelligence is already altering reality.
Above all, I
wanted to try to convey the problems of maintaining high moral standards while
competing in the market and meeting deadlines. The roots of journalistic ethics
have not found fertile soil in the growth and expansion of communication.
As to the
audience---I thought first of senior year in high school but surely college
years must be included.
I also
discovered, when I was asked to teach a seminar on the media at the lifecare
community I live in now, that many people in their late 80s and early 90s are intensely
interested in the topic and its technology. I would like to think that anyone
who is intellectually curious about journalism will find these essays
provocative and useful.
Q: At age
95, you have seen many changes in the news business. What would you say are
some of the most important?
A: I believe
that establishing ethical standards has been a persistent problem for
journalism, and in some ways has become singularly important in the environment
of modern technology.
The computer
and all its applications have challenged the principles needed to keep
journalism free, responsible and independent. It has also fragmented the press
as a business and made it vulnerable to all kinds of distortions and
misuse---witness the power of the internet platforms that control so much of
what we call data.
I am frequently
reminded that the press is the only privately owned, profit-seeking business in
our society that has a Constitutional protection---namely, the First Amendment.
The burden of responsibility that flows from that protection has changed
greatly over the years, but the challenge to do the right thing in a
competitive free enterprise remains largely the same today as it did in Ben
Franklin’s day.
Franklin was
one of the earliest advocates to support journalistic ethics, but he was, of
course, publishing a newspaper in a time when the technology was far simpler
and the circulation vastly smaller.
The very
nature of communication in these times provides such an immense audience that
the size alone has a profound influence in how it is used to shape public
opinion.
Probably the
single greatest change in the media is the ability of the current technology to
collect data, analyze its content, and use targeted information for dishonest
purposes.
“Media
literacy” is a phrase that frequently arises. The study of how digital
instruments have affected journalism, and how deliberate distortion and manipulation
can be identified, is a much needed development. In other words---"due
diligence” is necessary in determining who are the trustworthy purveyors of
news in public information.
Q: What
impact do you think it has on the press to be called “enemies of the people” by
the president of the United States?
A: Obviously,
the president’s hostility towards the press, and his attempts to intimidate it,
have chilled the energy and commitment to get at the truth.
However, the
president is not the only force working against the press. Despots the world
over have always seized the radio and television stations, the newspapers, and
now the internet wherever possible when they take over a government. A free and
responsible press remains vital for the survival of democracy, but that has
been the case since the invention of the printing press.
The most
confounding challenge today is the erosion of truth in public affairs. Truth
has become irrelevant in the digital ferment. Devices such as social media make
it possible for people to select their preferred reality rather than trusting fact-based
evidence.
The president
clearly made the concept of “fake news” a fashionable complaint for many people
who prefer one view over another---despite the facts.
I spent time
in my book talking about the loss of trust in our institutions, in ourselves,
and in our democracy.
One point that
received too little consideration from the commentators over the years is the
fact that the influence and control of the large data platforms has created an
environment so different from any other in our history that the most
knowledgeable and thoughtful practitioners in the journalism field have had to
think about creating a whole new set of restraints and regulations that will
somehow manage to discipline what seems to be an uncontrollable influence.
Q: What do
you see looking ahead when it comes to the role of the press in the U.S.?
A: We all know
the press has a critical role in the function of democracy. That has been true
since the founding of the country.
However, its
role in the future will be more important and more difficult than most of us
can envision. The innovative, expansive technology has to be mastered and somehow
controlled without diminishing its freedom and creativity.
The
political impact and the effect of digital mechanisms on all of our lives---socially,
politically, intellectually, and morally---are so extensive and deep-running
that the management and administration of the press, along with many other
enterprises in a free society, will need to be restructured.
Q: What are
you working on now?
A: I am
trying to develop a program dealing with the concept of a “moral compass” and
how it can contribute to responsible journalism. The object would be to provide
a place for ethical principles in journalism that can be adapted to the
communication instruments and requirements of the digital age.
The question
becomes---how will the principles of responsible journalism be adapted to the
nature of the internet, and the massive capacity of the data companies? And how
will the legal system accommodate the issues and disputes that are continually emerging
out of the debates over privacy, targeted advertising, and deliberate
falsehoods?
Q: Anything
else we should know?
A: I hope to
be around long enough to learn whether human society and deep learning machines
can live together.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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