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The Jewish Chronicle

Comment is free, but it can go too far

October 10, 2008 12:58

By

Alex Brummer,

Alex Brummer

2 min read

Media websites have a duty to make sure they do not turn into forums for hate


One of the great challenges for newspapers with widely used websites is how to police the comments by readers. Each publication has its own rules. The Guardian's Comment is Free website aims to take down unacceptable material as soon as possible after it is posted. The Jerusalem Post has a policy of pre-vetting material using a team of monitors.

Last month, The Jerusalem Post published an article by Edwin Bennatan criticising a contribution by Seth Freedman to The Guardian's CiF website.

Freedman, a British-born stockbroker now turned Israeli writer, is a frequent Guardian contributor both to the website and paper. He has recently been fleshing out his reporting and comment on the Middle East for a book due to be published next year.

The Bennatan article was critical of Freedman for allegedly equating Hamas's Al-Aqsa TV - a station which uses cartoons to encourage young people to become suicide-bombers - with the BBC and Sky News. This is a charge which Freedman rejects, believing that his CiF posting was taken out of context by the JPost writer.