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1c
1.
2. Many legal, moral and ethical issues may be used in my article as viewers may find some content not suitable or
the target audience may not agree with some content used in the article. I will plan these issues carefully as
many individuals may get offended depending on what you say in the article, I will make sure my text included
is fair and not biased against grime music. I will make sure to have copyright as people may want to use the
article without permission, it will be good if the article could be shared on many social media outlets, therefore
I will make sure I put my name at the end of my article. I will make sure I don’t offend anyone's gender, race,
disability. I will avoid to use anyone's trademarks as it may cause more copyright problems from other
businesses. The accuracy of my article must make sure that they don’t mislead my audience. They must also
make sure that they don’t alter or change any facts as this will undermine the audience's trust in the content.
My article will not include harm and offense TV journalists have a responsibility to protect children and young
people from unsuitable content as well as the rights of freedom of expression and freedom to receive
information. I will also make sure I include simple ethics such as being truthful and not biased. I will not talk
about an artists privacy without permission. I will not publish a false statement that is damaging to a person's
reputation; a written defamation.
The PPC is a comprehensive database housing information on complaints investigated by the Press Complaints
Commission from 1996 to 2014. Adjudicated
The Commission can elect formally to adjudicate on any unresolved complaint. This means that the
Commission issues a ruling on the substance of the complaint, which is published on this website. If the
Commission finds an outstanding breach of the Code, it will uphold the complaint against the publication. The
publication will then have to publish the Commission's ruling in full on its pages, with a headline reference to
the PCC and with due prominence. If the Commission finds no outstanding breach of the Code, the complaint
will be recorded as not upheld.
Resolved
A complaint is deemed to be resolved when the PCC has been able to negotiate a resolution with the
publication concerned that is satisfactory to the complainant. Some of the ways of achieving this are: the
publication of a correction or an apology; a follow-up piece or letter from the complainant; a private letter of
apology from the editor; an undertaking as to future conduct by the newspaper; or the annotation of the
publication's records to ensure that the error is not repeated.
3. Ofcom is the UK’s communications regulator. Ofcom has a statutory duty to take into account in its
decisions the views and interests of those who live in different parts of the UK. Our operations
in the nations are led by a senior Director in Glasgow, Cardiff, Belfast and London. Our national
offices can draw on the full resources of the whole organisation to tackle issues that affect one
part of the UK. Conversely, those operations ensure that the views, needs and special
circumstances of the nations receive Ofcom's attention. Ofcom may be able to help you
complain about, or report, issues relating to phone and postal services, and TV or radio
programmes.
The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) is the UK’s independent regulator of advertising
across all media. We apply the Advertising Codes, which are written by the Committees of
Advertising Practice (CAP). With any complaint the ASA receives, our focus is on providing a
proportionate and fair process for all involved. We don’t play a numbers game – just one
complaint can prompt us to take action if there appears to be a problem under the advertising
rules. We take all complaints seriously but we look at whether or not the rules have been
broken rather than simply basing our decisions on the number of complaints an ad might
prompt. We accept complaints from both the public and the industry. We protect the anonymity
of members of the public who lodge complaints with us unless there is a good reason to reveal
their details and we have their permission to do so (e.g. they want their name taken off a
mailing list). If a complainant is someone acting in an official capacity, for instance they
represent a competitor of the advertiser they’re complaining about, we will require them to be
named.