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Hany Farid - Are Deep Fakes a real problem?
Sophisticated digital imaging technology is being used to create 'Deep Fakes'; images and videos that are indistinguishable from reality. Things have moved on from celebrity faces being superimposed… Video, Audio
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Further fallout from Alan Jones and 'sock-gate' comments
Lots of listeners heard Alan Jones’s violent verbiage directed at Jacinda Ardern last week on the air in Australia, but the worst of it only hit headlines this week. Will the outcry run the… Audio
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Ngā Taonga Sound Archives: The history of Hong Kong and China
Hong Kong has been under Chinese rule since 1997, as part of the "one country - two systems" agreement worked out when Britain handed its former colony back to China. Audio, Gallery
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Is Facebook's currency plan a step too far?
Facebook's new currency plans were barely more than a press statement before they came under fire from US lawmakers. Why do people hate the idea, and is it likely to fly? Audio
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Greens' video controversy deliberate - expert
A political advertising veteran says the Green Party's contentious video ad poking fun at National Party leader Simon Bridges followed a classic formula.
Within two hours of the video being posted… Audio
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Broadcasting watchdog targets ‘harm’
‘Freedom in Broadcasting without Harm’ is the newly-stated mission of our most powerful media watchdog. The BSA is also asking if broadcasting standards need to change after the Christchurch mosque… Audio
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Background checks before cashing cheques for advocacy ads
A sudden spate of advocacy ads this past week shows media should check the claims of people placing political propaganda before cashing their cheques. Audio
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Traditional Pacific conservation could boost commercial fishing
Traditional marine conservation practices in the Pacific could be key to more successful commercial practices says a marine conservationist from Palau. Audio
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Australia votes - with a colourful cast of characters
A beginner's guide to what looks like - from the outside - a chaotic and complicated Australian voting process. Audio
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Mediawatch Midweek 27 February 2019
Mediawatch's midweek catch-up with Lately. This week Colin talks to Karyn Hay about lame lawsuits targeting US papers, some must-read and must-see local journalism, a politician copping flak for…
Coming up
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Fiji's Rabuka calls for election observer report to be tabled
Fiji's opposition leader is calling on the government to use the Multinational Observer Group report on the 2018 election as a basis for electoral improvements. Audio
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Midweek Mediawatch 13 February 2019
Mediawatch's midweek catch-up with Lately. This week Colin talks to Karyn Hay about political committee chaos splling over into social media, some risky media marketing, the Huawei hoo-haa, a…
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Minister faces media minefield in 2019
2018 was a turbulent year for the government’s media policy. Mediawatch asks the new minister Kris Faafoi about growing demand for public money in 2019 and calls for help from private companies… Audio
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China keeps the media in line
International journalists were startled when Chinese officials prevented them from reporting some events at the APEC summit in Papua New Guinea this week. It was a taste of the tactics China employs… Audio
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Marion Nestle - How food companies skew food research
Marion Nestle has made it her mission to shine a light on food politics and questionable dietary science. She calls out the food industry for manipulating research and educates us about how to fight… Audio
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Britannia rules the airwaves - and the papers, the websites and social media
They came. They waved. And the royal couple conquered our media completely. Video, Audio
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The Sampler: Too Many Millionaires by Darren Watson
Nick Bollinger pays attention to an acoustic set from Kiwi bluesman Darren Watson. Audio
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Lasting Impressions: when papers were the only news
The days of printed newspapers may be numbered in the digital era, but until the 1920s there were no other news media at all - and New Zealanders were eager readers. Historian and author Ian F Grant… Audio
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The Panel with Alexia Russell and Duane Major (Part 1)
Audio 24 Aug 2018RNZ's political editor Jane Patterson is with us from parliament as PM demotes Clare Curran. The National Party leader Simon Bridges wants to forge ahead with an inquiry into the leak of his expenses… Audio
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Parliament calls for submissions on 2017 election
The Justice Select Committee is calling for submissions on its inquiry into the 2017 General Election. The House asks the committee chair Raymond Huo to explain. Audio
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Calls for restrictions on alcohol ads around kids
Booze is everywhere - well, at least the marketing of it is. New camera research has found kiwi kids are exposed to alcohol marketing 4.5 times a day, and it's far more for Māori and Pasifika… Audio
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Fake news clampdowns raise alarm and media freedom worries in Asia
Several states now have laws targeting fake news and more are thinking about it. But should governments be responsible for the pushing back against deliberate disinformation online? Should the news… Video, Audio
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The battle for hearts and minds on our op-ed pages
New Zealanders are drowning in comment. Auckland University staff alone wrote 220 comment pieces for general audiences in 2017. Think tanks and sector groups churn them out op-eds, and many others do… Audio
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Bankrolling the big prizes for NZ journalism
The awards for the best New Zealand journalism have been sponsored by a global camera-maker, a paint firm and even Australia’s national airline in recent years. Now a local ISP is picking up the tab… Video, Audio
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Publisher puts a cat among the pigeons
Once a behind-the-scenes boss, National Business Review owner Todd Scott has been front-and-centre lately - culling contributors, taking on ad agencies and clashing with other journalists including… Audio
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Roger McNamee: Facebook's disruption of democracy
Early Facebook investor Roger McNamee knew something wasn't right with the platform in early 2016, when he saw "viciously misogynistic" memes attacking Hilary Clinton. Audio
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Will the Swiss pull the plug on public broadcasting?
While our government is promising to put more public money into public broadcasting, Switzerland is about to vote on whether to pull the plug on it altogther. Video, Audio
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Can the crowd fix Facebook and boost online news?
Under pressure over misinformation, founder Mark Zuckerberg says he will “fix Facebook” by prioritising “trustworthy and informative” news recommended by readers. Audio
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Billy Bragg: how skiffle changed the world
Skiffle was a youth cultural revolution that has been downplayed in histories of British rock, says singer-songwriter and activist Billy Bragg - and he’s written a book about it. He talks to Nick… Audio
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Brent Edwards signs off at RNZ
After seeing out another election at RNZ, newsgathering boss and former political editor Brent Edwards has left after 16 years at the broadcaster. Mediawatch asks him why, and how he sees the state of… Audio