EDITORIAL POLICY – Centro de Medios Independiente – Puerto Rico (CMI-PR)
I. Editorial Philosophy
a. In correspondence with its points of unity, the CMI-PR will have a policy
of open newswire policy on its Web page. This will serve as a decentralized
forum for voices and points of views that are usually suppressed or
distorted by the corporate and/or governmental press.
b. The CMI-PR will serve to open access to technology so all groups can
speak for themselves.
c. The CMI-PR purports to create an alternative to corporate and/or
governmental means of communication.
II. Editorial Mission
a. To provide an open newswire in accordance to our points of unity.
b. To maintain the newswire and the Web page as a community space, that
foments the participation, debate and exchange of information, especially
among disposed and marginalized members of society.
c. To create virtual and real networks that involve individual citizens and
grassroots organizations and/or NGOs, so facilitating their involvement in
social, environmental and political issues, which affect communities at a
local, national and global scale.
d. To create a mediated space that respects and foments the right of each
person to establish an open and free discourse.
e. To preserve the quality of the Web page as a useful and valuable
resource.
III. Editorial Collective
a. In accordance with its points of unity, the CMI-PR will have a policy of
open newswire on its Web page. In order to maintain the due purpose, the
organization, an the relevance of the newswire, the CMI-PR will establish an
Editorial Collective which will monitor the newswire as to promote articles
to the center column and to other CMIs, and to hide any article or message
outside the parameters established in the Editorial Policy.
b. The Editorial Collective should have a minimum of three members. Anyone
interested can join the Editorial Collective. It is suggested that the
Collective be kept at a realistic and practical size. (It is expected that
in the evaluation of this policy, after 6 months of its ratification, a
maximum number of members of the Editorial Collective be established, if it
is so deemed necessary.)
c. The Editorial Collective will decide, autonomously, the distribution of
its workload among the members, especially the responsibility of regularly
monitoring the open source.
d. The Editorial Collective will have the responsibility of informing the
organization of its performance, achievements, problems and of any
controversial decisions. At least one of its members should be present at
the CMI-PR general meetings.
e. The Editorial Collective has the responsibility of categorizing, hiding,
or promoting articles to the center column.
IV. Procedures and guidelines for categorizing and promoting open source
articles
a. The CMI-PR will determine relevant categories that will function as
thematical subdivisions to the open source.
b. Suggestions:
I. War
II. Vieques
III. Local Politics
IV. Education
V. Ecology
VI. Economy
VII. International
VIII. Community Groups
IX. Culture
c. The Editorial Collective will classify the articles according to these
categories
d. The Editorial Collective will have the responsibility of promoting, to
the center column of the web page, well-written and relevant articles. The
EC will promote to the center column investigate reports written by members
of the CMI and/or, that offers alternative perspectives to those presented
by the corporate press.
e. The Editorial Collective should also share relevant articles with other
CMIs and other independent media.
f. Articles that should be fomented and promoted:
I. Investigative articles, well sustained and relevant.
II. First hand coverage of mobilizations and/or protests.
III. Media analysis.
IV. Stories that affect groups or places usually invisibilized by the
corporate media.
V. Reports of initiatives and/or projects in favor of change and social
justice.
VI. Articles that link the local reality with national and/or global
dynamics.
V. Procedures and guidelines to hide articles
a. The person the Editorial Collective selects to be in charge of monitoring
the open newswire should remove the following types of messages:
I. Duplicated articles.
II. Any commercial events, products or services.
III. Illegible or blank postings.
IV. Spam attacks.
o The person monitoring the open source should hide the following types of
messages and immediately notify the Editorial Collective list. The members
of the Editorial Collective will have 48 hours to object to the decision of
hiding an article, post or message:
I. Messages of hate, racist, sexist, or in any way discriminatory. This
includes texts that incite to violence against the disposed, oppressed or
minority groups.
II. Event announcements, that are not press releases or investigative
reports, should go in the calendar section of the page.
III. Messages seeking contact with or directed towards an individual or to
the CMI-PR. The email contact for the CMI-PR is: cmi-pr@lists.indymedia.org
IV. Defamatory, libelous or personalist messages that reveal private
information or threaten an individual.
V. Proselitist messages, be them political or religious.
VI. Impostures, false facts, disinformation or personifications by a third
party.
VII. A request by an activist who wants his/her photo removed.
b. If an unexpected problem occurs (not included in the list above) about an
article or a posting, and the person monitoring the open newswire
understands that such should be removed, the procedure will be: hide the
message and notify the Editorial Collective list. The Editorial Collective
will then have 48 hours to discuss and object to the removal of the article.
(The CMI-PR can, following the consensus model, revise any decisions made by
the Editorial Collective. It is recommended that after 6 months of the
ratification of this policy, the existing collective should evaluate its
applicability and functionality.)
Last updated
Tue, 12 Aug 2003 09:27:14 -0400