FAIR (Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting)

FAIR is a national media watch group that offers criticism of media bias and censorship. It seeks to invigorate the First Amendment by advocating for greater diversity in the press and scrutinizes media practices that marginalize public interest, minority and dissenting viewpoints.

FAIR believes that independent, aggressive and critical media are essential to an informed democracy, but thinks that mainstream media are increasingly cosy with the economic and political powers. With mergers in the news industry, limiting the spectrum of viewpoints, U.S. media outlets overwhelmingly owned by for-profit conglomerates and supported by corporate advertisers FAIR sees independent journalism compromise.

FAIR was established in 1986 to shake up the establishment-dominated media. As an anti-censorship organization, FAIR exposes important news stories that are neglected and defends journalists when they are muzzled.

Strategies and Policies

Research and Monitoring: FAIR monitors a wide range of national news media - newspapers, magazines, television and radio - and publishes regular reports documenting pro-establishment, pro-corporate tilt in major news outlets.

Media Outreach: In its efforts to challenge bias and censorship, FAIR maintains a regular dialogue with journalists at news media outlets across the country. FAIR makes recommendations to media professionals on how to expand, diversify and improve coverage of a wide range of issues.

Media Activism: FAIR encourages media consumers to become media activists and regularly puts out activist alerts. It works with a nationwide network of local activists and groups that focus on key issues in their communities and participate in national campaigns coordinated by FAIR.

Media Watch Desks: FAIR operates specialized research and advocacy desks that work with activists and media professionals on specific issues. The Women's Desk analyses the effects of sexism and homophobia in the media and works to get feminist perspectives included in the public debate. The Labor Desk scrutinizes and confronts class bias in news coverage that favors moneyed interests and slights workers and unions. The Racism Watch Desk monitors and combats the media's marginalization, misrepresentation and exclusion of people of color.

CounterSpin: FAIR runs a radio program, which draws on a network of experts, analysts, activists and artists, which expose and highlight censored stories, biased and inaccurate news and the corporatisation of public broadcasting.

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An Economic and therefore Governmental Issue

While the digital divide might bring up the idea that enterprises will be able to sell more and more computers during the next years another truth looks as if there was no hope for a certain percentage of the population to get out of their marginalization, their position of being "have nots".

Studies show that the issue of different colors of skin play a role in this, but more than "racial" issues it is income, age and education that decides about the have and have nots.

There exist ~ 103 million households in the USA.
~6 million do not even have telephone access. Why should they care about computers?

The digital divide cuts the world into centers and peripheries, not into nations, as it runs through the boarder between the North and the South as well as through nations.

http://www.digitaldivide.gov/
http://www.digitaldividenetwork.org/
http://www.pbs.org/digitaldivide/
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1005-200-344552.html
http://racerelations.about.com/newsissues/racerelations/msubdigdivide.htm
http://www.techweek.com/articles/11-1-99/divide.htm
http://www.ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/net2/falling.html

The most different institutions with various interests in their background work in that field; not rarely paid by governments, which are interested in inhabitants, connected to the net and economy.
see also: http://www.washington.edu/wto/digital/

Searching information about the digital divide one will find informations saying that it is growing all the time whereas other studies suggest the contrary, like this one
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1005-200-341054.html

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Internet Exchanges

Internet exchanges are intersecting points between major networks.

List of the World's Public Internet exchanges (http://www.ep.net)

http://www.ep.net/
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