(10.00 am) (Proceedings delayed) (10.08 am)
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, Mr Jay.
MR JAY
I'm asked to remind everybody that tomorrow we're starting at 9.30 to accommodate video evidence from Australia.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, as long as that's the reason.
MR JAY
The first witnesses today are Dr Moore and Mr Moy, please. DR MARTIN JOHN EDWARD MOORE (affirmed) MR WILLIAM ANDREW MOY (affirmed) Questions by MR JAY
MR JAY
First of all, may I ask each of you to provide the Inquiry with your full names, please? First of all, Dr Moore.
DR MOORE
Martin John Edward Moore.
MR MOY
William Andrew Moy.
Q. Each of you has put in a main submission and then a number of additional or subsidiary submissions. In relation to Dr Moore, it's our tab 1. I don't think there is a date on it, but it's a submission which is obviously directed to the Inquiry. May I just confirm that this is your truthful evidence to the Inquiry Dr Moore?
DR MOORE
Yes it is.
Q. We have annexed to it other materials including a report in 2009, "A more accountable press", other reports, a statistical review of the PCC and other materials which have been drawn to our attention. Mr Moy, your main submission is at our tab 12. It's an 89-page submission. Again, is that your truthful evidence to the Inquiry?
MR MOY
It is.
Q. You've provided us again with further materials, a submission on regulatory approaches and user experience, which is our tab 13. Full Fact churnalism corrections, correspondence and a related annex which are tabs 15 and 16. Your response to the 12 key questions on module one, questions which were raised on 16 November, that's tab 16.
MR MOY
Yeah.
Q. Material relating to the Internet, which I understand your conclusions of which you wish to amend?
MR MOY
Yeah.
Q. And that version has been made available. And then there's the presentation you gave to the seminar on 12 October, "The future for self-regulation". Are you happy that that is accommodated into your evidence?
MR MOY
I am. I should probably say that that speech was written in a request for something to kick off debate and stimulate discussion, so it's not what you might call the Full Fact manifesto, but in its own terms yes, absolutely.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Before we start, could I thank you both for the enormous amount of work you've obviously put into all this. As I'm sure you appreciate, your views and your submissions absolutely go to the very core of what I have to consider, and I've found them very interesting. In a different world, I would very much welcome the opportunity to spend a very, very great deal of time talking about them, but I'm sure you appreciate that the dynamic of the time means that's not going to be possible, but I wouldn't want you to think that I was in any sense dismissive or not fully appreciative of what you've done, and there are some bits of work, I mean doubtless Mr Jay will come to parts of it, that I would like to take up and ask for some further work on, if that's possible. Let me just give one example. You've done some work on the statistics in relation to the PCC, which we've received. I don't know whether that's been shared with the PCC and whether they've had the opportunity to respond to it, but I'd quite light to drill into that, because I've been presented with figures and if I can make more sense of them and where the balance lies, I'd be grateful. Right.
MR JAY
May I ask you each separately to give a mini biography of yourself and then in your case Full Fact, and in your case, Dr Moore, the Media Standards Trust. First of all, Mr Moy.
MR MOY
Sure. I've been director of Full Fact since September 2007, before which I was working in the House of Lords for an independent cross bench peer. It's possibly worth saying I didn't have any substantive dealings with any of the peers who have represented the PCC here. Before that I worked for the All-Party Group on Transport Safety, again a nonpartisan charity, and before that I was doing a philosophy degree. In a previous life I was briefly an IT consultant. Full Fact is a non-partisan, nonprofit organisation which seeks to promote, working with journalists and politicians, the availability of trustworthy information in public debate. We are best known for fact-checking the claims made by politicians and journalists and we're an online publisher, therefore in our own right we're also a critical commentator on statistical policy. We're constituted as a charity, and in the process of registering as a charity, so we operate under a statutory public benefit obligation.
Q. Thank you. Dr Moore?
DR MOORE
I graduated from Cambridge in 1992, history, spent three years in the US, came back to do a Master's in history at the LSE, worked briefly in television production on a programme for Channel 4, worked for almost a decade for a small media research and development company that did work across the board for BBC, for IPC Media and many others. Whilst there I went back to the LSE to do a doctorate in the history department, but it was about the relationship between the government and the media, and based on that doctorate, I wrote a book called "The Origins of Modern Spin" published in 2006. I became the director of the Media Standards Trust in 2006, at its founding, and have been there since. The Media Standards Trust is an independent, nonpartisan charity. Its aim is to foster high standards in news on behalf of the public. It does that through research, like a think tank. It does it through development of online resources for the public, to help them navigate the news. It does it through campaigns we work closely with Hacked Off and it does it by running the Orwell Prize for political writing.
Q. Thank you very much. I am going to divide up this session into three sections. First, evidence bearing on current culture, practice and ethics of the press. Secondly, diagnosis of problems, if any, in the existing regulatory system. And third, proposals for reform. Mr Moy, your evidence is relevant to all three of those, but is particularly relevant to the first category. If I can ask you, please, to turn up your submission, which is our tab 12, and starts at 52724. You provide us, Mr Moy, with a significant number of examples. Are these intended to be comprehensive?
MR MOY
No. I should make absolutely clear the limits of our research, which is spelt out in the submission. We fact check neither a representative nor a random sample of media outputs. Anything you conclude from the collection of examples we've given is persuasive of the media in general, perhaps, but it can't be said to be a definitive or sort of an academic sample.
Q. You analyse three types of error. If I could ask you to go to 53727, first up is misunderstanding of the information reported. Just particularly with statistics, often reports become blown out of proportion in order to make them more eye-catching or possibly to fit a certain agenda.
MR MOY
Yeah.
Q. The second category is 53728, reporting a third party's spurious information. This addresses the problem with sources?
MR MOY
Yeah.
Q. And often sources don't stand up or are simply wrong, is a point you make?
MR MOY
Yeah.
Q. And then the third point, wilful inaccuracy, creating the wrong impression, what do you mean by "wilful" there?
MR MOY
We mean examples where it's hard to see how the journalist could have come up with the story they came up with from the sources they're citing other than by deliberately distorting them.
Q. You provide one example it's perhaps invidious to give examples when I'm doing it I hope fairly randomly of a Daily Express piece to do with house prices, it suggested house prices were going up.
MR MOY
That's right.
Q. In fact if one looked up at the whole piece, it's quite clear that in fact they were going to go down?
MR MOY
Yes.
Q. Which I think is what happened in the end?
MR MOY
This is something I mentioned in my seminar speech. The big headline front page splash I think was something like "House prices set to surge", backed up with quotes from various house pricing experts. The quote from Mr Archer was that it will provide significant support for house prices. This was taken out of context from a passage which concluded that "given that house prices have already fallen by some 3 per cent, we believe that they will fall by around 7 per cent in 2011". I just repeat the headline on that was "House prices set to surge". You may be able to do that accidentally under pressure of time, but I'm not quite sure how. Before we go on, I should emphasise that this isn't really Full Fact's territory. Our job is to play the bull, not the man, and we don't normally make judgments about the mindset of people who are making claims. It's not our business. It's for our readers to do, and in this case it's for the chairman to do. Clearly it would just be stupid for me to sit here in the Inquiry and claim total naivety about what's going on here, but ultimately these judgments aren't for us, they're for our readers and for you.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
No, I appreciate that, and that's clear. All this material is material that goes into the enormous amount of material that's been generated by the Inquiry to try and consider what's been happening and where we should go for the future.
MR MOY
Yes.
MR JAY
You've helpfully collected some examples under section 1 at 53737. There are very many examples there. It probably would be invidious to alight on any of them, since if I didn't cover each newspaper, then some would say that I've given unfair weight to a particular newspaper, so for that reason I won't.
MR MOY
Sure.
Q. I'm going to come back to section 2 in due course to show how complaints are dealt with, but so it's absolutely clear, the Inquiry has considered each of the examples you've given.
MR MOY
Right.
Q. Dr Moore, your submission touches on current culture, practice and ethics at paragraph 27, although I know it wasn't the primary purpose of your submission to address that, it was more to address my second and third themes. On the Internet numbering, it's page 4. On my version, I don't have the URN number. Paragraph 27. You said: "At its heart the phone hacking scandal was about abuse of power. People within Britain's biggest commercial media company came to believe they were not accountable to regulation, to the law, or to our elected representatives." You're expressing a wide opinion there about what was happening within News International, which again will be for the Inquiry to consider. Paragraph 28a you summarise there the types of issue which have concerned the Inquiry in this first module. Have you any comment on the evidence the Inquiry has received, particularly in these first three or four weeks before the new year?
DR MOORE
From the core participant victims?
Q. Yes. Is it representative of the sort of matters you're referring to generally here or is it remarkable or exceptional? How would you see it?
DR MOORE
Well, I think as the Inquiry heard, it was varied. I think there were clear examples of gross intrusion across many different aspects of people's lives. I think certainly when we wrote our 2009 report, we were very conscious about the coverage specifically of the McCanns, as the Inquiry has been, but we had heard and seen many other examples, both individual examples of people being misrepresented, attacked, and numerous examples of inaccuracy, which Will's talked about and I can talk about more.
Q. In your 2009 report, which is under our tab 2, section 3, 58835, you identify three particular factors which bear on current culture, practice and ethics. The first factor is the public trust in the press, already very low, may be declining further, and you refer to various polls. What is the message of those poll, apart from what we gather from the headline?
DR MOORE
The Ipsos MORI poll, which I think has been running for a number of decades, has consistently had journalists very low towards the bottom, but other polls more recently have suggested that and that's, when you break it down, that's more specific to the red tops in the past. If you look at more recently, particularly since I think Hutton onwards, there has been a decline more broadly both of broadsheet and mid-market and tabloid, and even of broadcast. So there seems to have been in the last decade a further decline from across the board, not just simply from some of the papers that people have never particularly trusted.
Q. Thank you. Your second subheading, 3.2, at page 58836, "Risks of inaccuracy in the press are increasing", and the point you make there: "Competitive and commercial pressures increase at the same time as numbers of journalists and editors employed decrease." Is that right?
DR MOORE
Yes. It's a similar point that Nick Davies was making in Flat Earth News.
Q. Thank you. Then your third point: "Growing concern about privacy intrusion." And you cite in particular Operation Motorman, but then three other pieces of litigation. Obviously the criminal case Goodman/Mulcaire, Murray v Big Pictures case, which we've heard evidence about, and then the Mosley case. Can I ask each of you to comment on a point which has recently been made, that there's been too much focus on the bad in the sense that the majority of journalists exhibit good practice the majority of the time, more or less what Mr Dacre said, but he put it in his own words, of course. Is that a fair representation or does it have to be qualified in some way? Perhaps if you could focus on the way I've put it rather than how anybody else might have put it.
DR MOORE
I absolutely think it's incredibly important to talk about the enormous amount of excellent good journalism across the country, and particularly I think at a local level. I think part of the problem here is that there haven't been any allegations at local level, local news is struggling enormously and local journalists are working incredibly hard. I should also say that one of the reasons why the Media Standards Trust runs the Orwell Prize for political writing on behalf of the Council of the Orwell Prize is specifically to highlight and to show the excellent journalism across the board at the national and the local level, and we give prizes not just to the journalism, but also to the blog and to the book that has most closely achieved Orwell's aim of turning political writing into an art.
Q. Do you have a perspective on this, Mr Moy?
MR MOY
Yes, I share the view that it's important to recognise that the majority of journalists and the majority of journalism is good and worthwhile and much of it is admirable. I think the opposite of the other half of the question. I think we haven't talked enough about the problems. We've spent a lot of time focusing on the impact on individual victims, we've spent a lot of time on intrusion and prize problems, but we've barely touched on the widespread problem of accuracy, which is a huge problem, which the public recognise and have recognised, as Martin was saying, for decades. Unlike the other problems that have prompted the Inquiry, it has been largely unacknowledged by the industry so far, and that is most worrying, because going to the Inquiry's terms of reference, one of the things you're asked to make recommendations about is warning signs that are missed. Fewer that two in 10 people trusting journalists to tell the truth is the clearest possible warning sign. It's not inevitable, it's not the case in other comparable countries. It is a real warning sign that not all journalism isn't trustworthy, not even most journalists aren't trustworthy, but enough journalism by enough journalists is untrustworthy that it doesn't make sense for the ordinary member of the public to trust journalism, and that's a huge problem for our society, because journalism is important, and the good journalism is devalued by journalism which is recklessly inaccurate. I suppose the one other thing I should say about accuracy is this is squarely in the realm of regulation, not law. We've heard a lot about how the Inquiry's problems are basically legal problems which should have been fixed by the police. Widespread inaccuracy of the sort shown by the many, many examples we've put before you is a regulatory problem. It is a regulatory failing. It's clearly heralded not just by polls but by many, many examples that expert organisations would point you to, if they hadn't given up trying by now, and it's something that really needs to be at the heart of what the Inquiry makes recommendations about.
Q. Thank you very much. Because the examples you give, most of them, there wouldn't be a claimant in defamation proceedings because they are generic inaccuracy complexes.
MR MOY
They're what the PCC calls general accuracy. They affect society at large. Whether or not the GTP has gone up or down is important to all of us, whether crime has gone up or down is important to all of us, but there's no one person or one body who is responsible for saying, "Hang on, you've infringed on my prerogatives here". It's for the industry to uphold its own standards and it's for the regulator to do the rest.
Q. Thank you. We'll come back to that matter in the third section of this evidence. May I address now the effectiveness of the current system of regulation, which I suppose itself divides into three parts: there's the issue of internal regulation within newspaper organisations, there's the issue of the general law, which is certainly addressed by Dr Moore, and that includes certain procedural or adjectival aspects including conditional fee arrangements, and then there's the issue of self-regulation or independent regulation or perhaps something different altogether. The first category, internal regulation, Dr Moore, you touch on that really implicitly in paragraphs 42 to 44 of your statement, which is on the internal numbering at page 7.
DR MOORE
Yes.
Q. It's implicit in paragraph 44, if I've read it correctly, that the sort of systems which you are recommending here, these are internal systems, are not systems which you believe are currently in place. Is that a correct interpretation of what you're saying?
DR MOORE
Yes, that's right. I mentioned at the beginning we do research and development as well as campaigning and the development side we do partly because our belief has always been that it should be, particularly in the case of trustworthiness and accuracy, it's not just the responsibility of news organisations and others, although it is their responsibility; it's also the responsibility of the public, but they need the tools in order to make the judgments as to whether something is trustworthy or not. So we have had three projects very, very focused on online media, specifically to try and give people more tools in which to make more informed judgments as to whether or not something is trustworthy. So the website journalisted.com is a directory of journalists that write in the UK and it's automatically updated with the articles they publish in the press and it gives some basic information about the articles themselves and, if it's provided online, the journalist. And the journalist can claim that profile and add further biographical information, and it's designed specifically to try and give someone both the opportunity to see that the person knows what they're writing about and also an ability to challenge and to contact that person, because up until we launched the site back in late 2007, it was incredibly difficult, incredibly difficult, to try and challenge someone, an individual or an organisation, when it came to inaccuracy or intrusion. Similarly, we've done a website called churnalism.com, which is specifically geared to try to help people distinguish between articles that are original and articles that are very closely based on PR copy, press copy. Again, part of the reason for that is the sourcing of articles, in online particularly, remains incredibly poor, and that's despite the fact that it's so easy now to link to original sources that I cannot understand why news organisations don't do it. Many bloggers do it, lots of other people on the Internet do it, but even now mainstream news organisations seem to have a huge reticence to link to original sources.
Q. I think you're suggesting here that the PCC code, which sets out basic standards and we'll come to the code, I'm sure is not enough. One needs clearer standards of internal regulation which make it clear the procedures journalists should follow in order to create an audit trail and a discipline that sources checked, that the process is transparent, and, if necessary, accountable if an issue arises as to accuracy or intrusion, whatever it might be in due course. Is that more or less it?
DR MOORE
Exactly. I think that most people, if you asked them, it makes common sense. In the first instance, if they see something that is inaccurate or intrusive or misrepresentive, the immediate reaction is to go to the author of the piece or the organisation involved and tell them. So it makes sense that they should be given the opportunity or the details to enable them to do that. In many cases, they're still not, and I can give you examples of that. We'll come to this, I know, but it seems to me that actually part of the job of the new regulator should be the oversight of the internal compliance mechanism such that it can talk about best practice, it can indicate what it thinks news organisations ought to be doing, and when they fail to do that and when they clearly are ineffective, then it can step in.
Q. Is there a legitimate concern here that the regulator in this guise may be interfering with editorial comment, matters of news agenda, rather than fact, which are, after all, the exclusive province and discretion of individual papers?
DR MOORE
Sorry, yes, I didn't mean to imply that, if I did.
Q. You didn't, no, but I'm putting
DR MOORE
Like Onora O'Neill gave a speech in Oxford in November in which she said that really the job of a regulator should be to regulate process, not content. As soon as we start to get towards content then it starts to get I completely understand anxieties about censorship, et cetera, but absolutely it should be the role of the regulator to regulate process.
Q. Thank you. The general law is probably too wide a topic for us sensibly to address in our 90-minute slot. You touch on this, Dr Moore, concern about abolition of CFAs in paragraph 48 of your statement. A bit later on, however, you do refer us to a New Zealand comparable and a Finnish comparable which we will look at because those may well be helpful but I hope you'll forgive me if I'm going to gloss over paragraph 48. Can I address now the third subheading, which is self-regulation, the existing system, the PCC. Mr Moy, section 2 of your submission, where you give us some examples, case studies I think it would be fair to describe them as
MR MOY
Yes.
Q. of your dealings with both newspapers and the PCC when you have attempted to correct errors; is that right?
MR MOY
Yes.
Q. Again no doubt the same principle applies, this isn't comprehensive, it is necessarily anecdotal, but it provides us with a picture?
MR MOY
Yes, and I think that if anything it's skewed towards the fact that we are regular and increasingly experienced users of the PCC. They know who we are, we know who they are, we know how the system works and they know that we comment on them publicly. So if anything, I think we get the better end of the deal compared to the average complainant. But that's speculation.
Q. The picture which emerges, and it may be invidious to alight on only one example, is that sometimes you have immediate success
MR MOY
Is there an example of that?
Q. Okay, I've overstated it. Sometimes you have a reasonable degree of success, I think immediate is putting it too high. On other occasions, it's the opposite end of the extreme, and there are some cases when there's more than one newspaper who in your view has been guilty of inaccurate statement
MR MOY
Not in our view. They accept the inaccuracies. We've only ever had one case where our view that there was an inaccuracy has ever been not accepted.
Q. Thank you. But the approach of individual newspapers to the same complaint varies?
MR MOY
Yes.
Q. Sometimes within the one complaint. We can see this at 53795 without going into the detail of it.
MR MOY
Yes.
Q. Some newspapers were prepared to accept the error reasonably speedily. Others dragged their feet. Some, I think, denied it altogether. Is that a fair characterisation?
MR MOY
Yes. In the final extreme we ended up, I think, having to get a Parliamentary Question to force the public body concerned to clarify the statement so that that position was on the record so that the newspapers would consider correcting it and then we argued for months about prominence, which I think reflects very badly on Ofsted, which was the public body involved, as much as the newspapers.
Q. Thank you. I'm not going to ask about papers which in your view are particularly bad, but I am going to ask this question: are there any newspapers which in general have a positive approach to the correction of errors and therefore a reasonably satisfactory system?
MR MOY
Um
Q. Or do you feel that
MR MOY
There is obviously difficulty with singling out particular newspapers in either direction. In our relatively limited experience with the Financial Times, they've been pretty constructive. You send an email, it does disappear into a black box, but you usually get a sensible response within a couple of days, so fair play to them. The Financial Times, obviously, though, is an exception among daily newspapers. The Guardian comes across as having a very strong set of principles in this area, and at its best it works very well. You get a considered response quickly. However, I think the Guardian's quite a good example of why readers' editors aren't a panacea, because effectively it's a single point of failure. We've had examples where perhaps the readers' editor has been ill and it's taken a couple of months to get back to us. Quite understandable. We've also have examples where issues we've raised have just dropped off the radar. So a sort of qualified endorsement, I suppose.
Q. Yes.
MR MOY
On the other hand, I certainly wouldn't accuse them of bad faith, which I think we have experienced from other newspapers.
Q. As I said, it's probably invidious to go further down the ladder, see where we might be at the bottom, so I'll move on. Dr Moore, tab 4 and your analysis of PCC statistics, can we see where we are on this. The basic message we get, I think, from page 58774. It's the problems you have had in analysing the data.
DR MOORE
Mm-hm.
Q. Level with the upper hole punch you say: "There are four reasons why we can't." That is to say judge how well the PCC is performing. "The PCC only releases a small proportion of the data it captures. The PCC does not make clear the methodology by which it analyses the data. The PCC is not consistent in its definition of the data. The PCC does not have adequate processes to capture the data." Then you develop each of these points, starting at page 58775. Is it possible, Dr Moore, for you to give the headline messages you would wish to give under each of those four categories by reference to your report?
DR MOORE
Of course. I should start by saying this report is unpublished and was submitted to the Inquiry unpublished partly because to give some background and context, when we published the 2009 report, one of the criticisms made about us, which had also been made about Nick Davies' book Flat Earth News and other critics, was that people had misunderstood the way in which the PCC's statistics worked and therefore could neither judge the PCC nor judge the newspapers who had either breached or not breached the code. We did our very best, based on the figures available. It's quite hard, because the figures available on the site are quite difficult to access, they're split up into many different chunks, and so we built the website deliberately to try and make it easier, where we scraped all the data going back to 1996 from the PCC site, it's open and publicly available, so that you can now look and see who has the most complaints against them, who has the most resolved complaints, the most upheld. You can subdivide it by clause, privacy, accuracy. So you can do what we wanted to do, which was to actually try and get an indication of accountability, which you can't do from the PCC's statistics. Once we had that website and the database, we thought we would do some analysis off it. We quickly found that it was extremely difficult to do that analysis because, as I say, the amount of data released is limited. So in 2010, of the over 6,000 original complaints, many of which we know fall off, the only ones available to analyse are 526, so quite a small proportion of that data. Even those 526, it's not a full amount, as we discovered ourselves, because quite a number of people request that their complaint doesn't go up on the website and then when they make that request, often it's taken down. Now, we've said to the PCC we don't think that's consistent. If the person is concerned about privacy and anonymity, then they can request their complaint be anonymised, but from the perspective of actually trying to analyse the complaints and work out what they mean, if you remove it entirely, then clearly it makes it impossible for anyone else to see that there has been a complaint on that basis against that news outlet. So I could go on, but essentially what we found was we could go as far as we could with the data that was available and we could give the indicative results of that data, but we would never, neither would anyone else, ever be able to properly scrutinise or make accountable the complaints body.
Q. Thank you. The lack of clarity as regards methodology, that's the bottom of page 58775. You make an interesting point about the average period of time it takes to resolve a complaint, which I think in 2010 this was repeated in evidence to the Inquiry is nearly 33 days. You're not altogether comfortable with that figure, Dr Moore; is that right?
DR MOORE
Well, the conversation when I met with not with the current director, when I met with two members of the PCC, this was what I was told. The evidence that the current director, who I speak to regularly, Stig Abell, contradicted this, I have spoken to him since and the two of us are trying to resolve what the discrepancy is. The difficulty from that perspective is we have no access to the data so we can't do the analysis ourselves so we're reliant on what they tell us, and this is what they told us, which is different from what Stig Abell said this week.
Q. Your figure is 106 working days, which as you say is three times greater than the PCC's figure.
DR MOORE
In other words the data that's available at the moment is it's quite hard to back it out, because you can find if you work at it, you can normally find the date of the original article. There is no date recorded for the complaint, but then the complaint resolution, or otherwise, is put up on the website. So the only openly available data was the original article and the resolution as per the website, that's what we measured. When we spoke to them about it, they completely justifiably said that's not a fair representation because actually the complaint can come in some while subsequent to the original article, the resolution often doesn't go on the website immediately that it's made we didn't know that, but they told us that so it can be much shorter than that. We said great, can you give us any information or detail to show us how much shorter, and they said no. Again, we're at this difficult point, and this is really the point of this was to say it's terribly difficult, particularly given the anecdotal evidence that we hear from Will and from others, many of whom say it's taken an awful long time, much longer than expected, and I'd like to say that from all my experience, the PCC secretariat have been extremely helpful, worked amazingly hard and assiduously and done the best they can. I think in many cases, certainly from people I've spoken to, the problem is with the news outlet rather than with the PCC, but
Q. I think I'm going to have to ask you to go more slowly, because I can see
DR MOORE
Sorry. But the point that we were making was, for example, if one wants to as Will has personally experienced try and find out if particular papers are obstructive and they take an awful long time to deal with complaints, that would be it would be very helpful to know that within the complaint statistics, because then not only would that be would the public know that, but then hopefully the news outlet concerned would see that and would feel embarrassed about that and would do its best to improve it. Without having the data, without knowing, it's impossible to do that.
Q. It sounds as if you would wish to formulate some specific request of the PCC in relation to one particular year's worth of data, maybe 2010 would be a reasonable year to take, since you've already looked at it to some extent, and then see whether a further analysis can be undertaken. Is that correct?
DR MOORE
Absolutely, and I think ironically enough when I was speaking to them about this, as I say, we were preparing this in the early half of 2011, and I spoke to them I think in May, June of 2011, they were right then preparing a new website which they said was going to detail much more of this. That has been, as I understand it, postponed, or at least pushed back because of the events of July. So I'd be very happy to sit down with them and try and work out exactly what this is.
MR MOY
Could I perhaps jump in at this point?
Q. Please.
MR MOY
Speaking not specifically but as regular users of statistics in all forms, this seems like a fairly obvious case of call a statistician, which isn't a regular cry, but what we have is effectively two good faith efforts to produce numbers from data which are leading to widely disparate systems. That suggests either the data is bad or the methodology is bad. I think there's actually a good case that the data is bad, because there isn't an easy definition of many of the things that we're trying to measure here, whether you go from when the article is published or when the resolution is published or when a complaint is received to when it is dealt with. Perhaps quite personally taking the examples we've experienced, if you go from when a complaint is made to when an inaccuracy is accepted, and then you have a separate period of time between when the inaccuracy is accepted and the correction is printed, much of which has been taken up, sometimes months of it, by arguments about due prominence, so in trying to extract sensible statistics from this kind of quite dynamic process you need some quite clear definitions and some sensible methodology, rather than sort of firing questions at the PCC, looking to the future, I think it might be useful to involve some professional statisticians in designing a data correction process
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But it's worse than that, isn't it, because do I gather from what I've read that assume a complaint is rejected because it doesn't qualify, now that might be done in three days.
MR MOY
Less. Three minutes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Another complaint, which actually goes through the process, takes 70 days, for example.
MR MOY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Add the two figures together and then you get an average which is 35 days but that's not representative.
MR MOY
No. Famously the average person has one testicle, but it doesn't tell you very much about people. This is one of the classic cases where excuse me.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
No, I understand the justification. Probably that wouldn't apply if you talked about the average male.
MR MOY
Indeed. This is a classic case where the average isn't very useful, probably, unless there's a good reason to believe it's representative. What would be very interesting to see is how many cases take less than a week, less than two weeks, less than three weeks for frequency distribution, if you like.
DR MOORE
As I say, split out by news outlets such that you can see which of these outlets are taking an awful lot longer than others.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
How valuable would this information be, do you think, for what I'm trying to do at the moment?
DR MOORE
I think to the point about it comes, I think, alongside the legal point, which has been made to me frequently, which is that most people want to have a prompt correction or apology. Mostly people find it very difficult to get a prompt correction or apology. There are many reasons for that. At the moment, it's often extremely hard to work out what those reasons are, because the information isn't available to work out, who is taking a long time and for what reasons. In that respect, yes, I think it would be very helpful to break down who takes a very long time and try and work out why that is.
MR MOY
I think my view is slightly different. I don't much care I think it's accepted that the PCC needs to be replaced, so raking over the pathology of exactly how it was failing isn't that interesting. What I think is essential is that any successor to the PCC has a sensible way of monitoring its effectiveness, which is pre-defined, if you like, and which provides clear warning signals if things are going wrong, clear ways of assessing its effectiveness. That may be I think Martin is going to say a bit blase about the past, but
DR MOORE
No, I think that's a fair point, actually. Looking forwards, it seems to me as though one of the problems that we've had is that because there aren't specific as I understand it, in the legal process, there are very specific dates for complying with certain aspects of the legal process when it comes particularly to defamation cases. There aren't any similar in the self-regulatory process. If there were, that might be very helpful. So, in other words, if people had to respond to certain requests within a certain timeframe, that actually would be very helpful.
MR JAY
That's one of your proposals, I think.
MR MOY
It's something we regard as absolutely vital, having been led down the merry dance far too many times.
Q. Dr Moore, your assessment of the current system, we see this most clearly in section 5.2 of your 2009 report, your tab 2 of page 58849. You helpfully remind us of the recent form. You deal with the code of practice, but I'm going to cover that in a moment. System of governance on the next page. I think the point you're making there is the existing system of governance is not demonstrably independent, transparent and accountable; is that right?
DR MOORE
That's right.
Q. Again, in terms of headlines, why not?
DR MOORE
It should be said that the time when we said this, it was absolutely not accepted. It was not accepted by the Press Complaints Commission, who attacked the report; it was not accepted by the news industry. Many of the things that the report says are now generally accepted, not just by those outside the industry but by some of the people who have come before the Inquiry. Only yesterday, Baroness Buscombe talked at some length about problems of independence. One of the specific concerns we raised in the report was that it seems to us that compared to other regulatory bodies there weren't the independent mechanisms within the constituent bodies, and particularly between the Press Board of Finance. When I spoke to people from other regulatory bodies, they said that normally that would be peopled by accountants and others who would simply be working out the levy, it would be a transparent levy, a percentage of revenues, et cetera, and then distributing it to the regulatory body. This was and is very different. It's peopled by very senior people within the industry, who collect the finance and then distribute it. It has no transparency, despite the governance review itself of the PCC recommending that they become more transparent and put out a website; it hasn't and it didn't. So we don't know if one, in that wonderful journalistic way, follows the money, who pays how much for the system, which seems to me to go partly to the heart of where the power lies, and indeed, going by Baroness Buscombe's evidence yesterday, that's exactly the point that she made. In terms of transparency, we've talked a little bit about that. I can talk more. In terms of accountability, and this is I think one of the central points and the difference, as we saw it, between and still see between the mediation and regulation, is that many editors in front of this Inquiry and elsewhere have talked about how they're very proud to have only had a very limited of upheld adjudications against them. However, if you look through the cases, the complaints that have been made against them that are resolved, many of those resolved cases certainly appear to have breached the code. But, because they're resolved, there's no record of a breach kept. I suppose it's the equivalent of pleading guilty and being acquitted. That has a number of different effects, one of which is that it means that there is very little learning from it, so one can't both within the organisation and more widely in the news industry say this organisation is regularly breaching the code on this basis and then take action as a result. Then obviously from the public's perspective, they can't look at the individual organisations and see who is or is not regularly breaching the code, and I can give specific examples. In 2010, the analysis we did on the evidence available, just to take one example, there were 63 resolved complaints against the Daily Mail. If one goes through each of those summaries on the PCC website, it is in 47 cases, they clarified, collected or apologised. One wouldn't have thought they would have clarified, corrected or apologised unless there had been some breach of the code. That's absolutely arguable and I accept that, but going by that alone, 47 of 63 is quite a high number. But in terms of the upheld adjudications in 2010, there were zero. So from the public perspective, and indeed the way in which the paper presents itself, it has an almost unblemished record, but actually one could argue that it's breaching the code on a regular basis.
Q. Yes. Thank you. Mr Moy, you
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
It's likely to be the well, there could be two arguments. First of all, the newspaper takes the view that even if there's an argument about it, it's much better to get it right in the way that the person who is complaining wants it, and that might be seen as positive. On the other, it might be said that the more egregious the breach, the more likely it is that that will be accepted and reflected in a resolution than pursued to an adjudication. There are two possible ways of looking at it.
DR MOORE
Yes. Actually, the argument has been made, not in front of this Inquiry but a number of times before, that actually part of the point of the complaints system is to resolve and not adjudicate and therefore a resolved complaint is a sign of success. The problem is twofold, one of which is from the perspective that the system should act in the public interest as well as in the interests of an individual member of the public. The wider public, from their perspective, see very little can see repetitive mistakes and repetitive breaches and apparently no action taken. The individual complainant often is given the impression: this is the best you will get. If I could cite one example, in late 2009, shortly after very shortly after Professor David Nutt was dismissed from the government after writing a report which was critical of the drugs policy, two newspapers, the Sun and the Mail, published stories about Professor Nutt. Well, actually more about his children, three children. They had a photograph of one of his sons smoking what they said was cannabis. It was factually incorrect. They'd taken the picture from his Facebook page. They showed a picture of his daughter, saying she was drunk. She wasn't, there was a lid on the bottle. And another photograph of his other son, who lived in Sweden, naked coming out of a sauna. They complained. As I understand it, the PCC, as usual, was extremely helpful and did the best that it could, but after much discussion, the best they could get was the removal of the articles from the website and a commitment from both papers not to publish again and a letter published in the Sun and nothing in the Mail, which was certainly from I think the perspective of the complainants and certainly from the perspective of the wider public not very helpful.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That creates the distinction that I've been trying to draw people out on, between what is a complaints-handling system and a regulator properly so-called.
DR MOORE
Exactly. Exactly.
MR JAY
Thank you. Mr Moy, you capture your ideas on current failings in the existing regulatory system at 53815 under our tab 13. It is it's fair to say broadly convergent with the evidence we've just heard.
MR MOY
Yeah.
Q. Under the heading "The user experience", you make the point that the PCC some of the things it does well include the ease of making a complaint, acknowledgment, direct contact with human beings, helpful staff. You make all those points.
MR MOY
Yeah.
MR JAY
"Contrary to expectations, we haven't yet experienced the third party rule".
MR MOY
Yes, that has changed. This was written before the seminars, so probably in September, so we're slightly further down that road.
Q. Thank you. Then you make some very specific points at the top of page 53816.
MR MOY
Yeah.
Q. This really strikes at the heart of the issue, it may be said, so could I ask you to speak to those matters?
MR MOY
The dependence on co-operation?
Q. Absolutely.
MR MOY
Yes. As I think I said in my seminar talk, the user experience of the PCC is basically defined by the newspapers. The PCC to some extent acts as a postbox between the complainant and the newspaper. If the newspaper drags its feet, the PCC doesn't have the power to compel a response. If the newspaper gives a derisory response, the PCC in our experience doesn't just tell the newspaper where to get off, it puts it to the complainants and asks for a reaction. I know that or I'm told that the PCC complaints staff do work very hard behind the scenes with editors to get sort of sensible responses, but we've had cases, for example a classic case, Daily Mail, this was the week before the seminar. We had two adjudications pending on the Wednesday of that week about Daily Mail front pages. These were complaints which had been kicking around for several months. You will recall that at the beginning of that week of the seminar, Paul Dacre announced that there was going to be a page 2 corrections column, and the fact that there was now a page 2 corrections column was a major factor in the PCC adjudication deciding that it wasn't necessary for the full page front page error to have any correction featured on the front page. But we found out after the corrections column was announced, we found out that the Daily Mail was unilaterally planning to run these corrections two days before the adjudications were due to take place, because I got an email at 6.30 on a Friday evening from the PCC complaints team saying, "We've just heard from the Daily Mail that they're planning to put these in the corrections column, and as you think the corrections column is a good idea, they assume you'll agree with this". I obviously thought that was as massive abuse of process to circumvent the adjudication procedure like that, and to do so just at Lord Hunt's first ever meeting of the Commission I thought was really bizarre, and the PCC, rather than saying, "No, hang on, you can't do this, this is a ridiculous way to treat us", which I think they should have done, referred it to me to ask what I thought. Which I think absolutely sums up the weakness of the PCC in that sort of situation, and surprisingly, and alone among the Daily Mail the Daily Mail alone does this, as far as I know, but we've seen on several occasions them coming to the PCC the night before something is due to be published or the working day before something is due to be published with little changes to the extent that once I think we had to get them to reprint a correction properly because they'd buried it within another story. We've also seen that happen to another organisation. So there does seem to be a sense that newspapers can play games with the PCC and the PCC can't really do much about it. So, yeah, the PCC depends on the co-operation and frankly it doesn't get it. The PCC depends on good faith, and frankly it doesn't always get it.
Q. Thank you. Ideas for reform now. The first subheading, I suppose, is "better internal regulation", but Dr Moore has addressed that in paragraphs 43 and 44 of his submission of page 7 on the internal numbering. I think we've probably already covered those matters, Dr Moore; is that right?
DR MOORE
It's probably worth saying, actually, that one of the projects that we have that we did for two years was with Sir Tim Berners-Lee and his Web Science Trust and it was specifically looking at how to make give people greater tools to assess the trustworthiness of information, particularly news on the web, and we looked at ways in which to make the provenance of stories much clearer, both in terms of basic information like who wrote them, who they were published by and when they were published, and actually building that literally within the structure of a story using what's called metadata. And I think that there are, as I say here, there's an enormous opportunity to make news much more accessible, as Baroness O'Neill has spoken about, without much effort at all. We worked closely with the Associated Press on this. They integrated it into all their articles, such that now when you look at an Associated Press article on the Associated Press essential site it has a small "p" at the top which is a link to the principles to which it adheres, and that's embedded with metadata in every article they publish. I think there are an enormous number of things that could be done, which, as I say, many aren't at the moment. There are some very good organisations and individuals doing some of this stuff, but in general, particularly in the UK, not many.
Q. Thank you.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Is this a matter of good practice or can it really be taken further into regulatory reform?
DR MOORE
If one accepts that the future regulator ought, as much as possible, to be overseeing a system of devolved self-regulation, so organisations do have compliance mechanisms within the organisations themselves, which I think it ought to be, then I think this is relevant because at the point where a regulator there is a problem and a regulator has to go into an organisation and say, "What went wrong, and how and why?", without some of these mechanisms, and I agree, some of them are best practice, but without some mechanisms by which to track back, an audit trail, if you like, I think it would be much more difficult for the regulator to make an informed judgment.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR JAY
Mr Moy, you touch on this at page 53814 under our tab 13, under the heading "The regulator is only part of a wider system for upholding standards". In the second paragraph: "For newspapers themselves self regulation should mean just that, journalists and papers upholding high standards themselves and the regulator should be a backstop." I understand that, but how are journalists and papers to uphold high standards themselves? It's a good idea, but how are we going to achieve this?
MR MOY
I find that a slightly surprising question. It's part of the definition of a journalist, it's part of most journalists' essential self-respect, that they uphold to high standards. I mean, especially in relation to accuracy. If you can find a journalist who is willing to proudly say that he's not that bothered about accuracy, then good luck to you.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, it's not that. I think it's not quite the problem. The problem has been the suggestion that the pressures on the newsroom put pressures on journalists to turn out more and more, which inevitably has an impact on the type of input they would like to put into the article.
MR MOY
Right.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Which itself can then affect the standard that they would always wish to aspire to, but sometimes can't obtain.
MR MOY
Okay, fair enough. In which case I suppose what you're drawing out there is the point that unregulated journalism isn't actually unfettered journalism. It's not just journalism where the journalist gets to do the best job they can possibly do. It's journalism where the journalist has to work within the structure that's defined for them by their company, their managers, who obviously have goals other than selflessly serving the public benefit, and perfectly properly, too. Which is one reason why we do need regulation to counteract those, if you like, market failures. Nonetheless, there is this is a matter of basic civic responsibility in a corporate level and an individual level. Getting to a point where you don't deliberately publish things that are inaccurate is not an achievement, it's square one welcome to civilisation. The analogy here isn't with, you know I'm not even sure what the analogy would be. The analogy when we're talking about things like the Express front page where they're deliberately apparently taking things out of context is with a water company putting poison in the water supply.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'm not sure about that, but let's not go there. I'm prepared to accept, and I'm sure journalists would accept, that a high standard of accuracy is important. The question is how to deal with the problems that have arisen in a way that ensures that freedom of expression is not in any sense impacted adversely.
MR MOY
Okay. Can I jump in with just a small point, which is I think then you have to start making distinctions in our field of accuracy between, if you like, different types of inaccuracy. Mistakes happen. That's a normal part of journalism. That's I'm sure a normal part of the law, for that matter. Full Fact makes mistakes, all national newspapers make mistakes. That's not about this.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's why the Court of Appeal exists.
MR MOY
Well, indeed, yes, and the Supreme Court, of course.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Oh yes.
MR MOY
But we have to include in our sense of what accuracy means making corrections when necessary, and in fact that's exactly what clause 1 of the code does, and that's the right answer to what happens as a natural part of the pressures of being busy journalists dealing with complex topics to tight deadlines. Those kind of mistakes, absolutely, the answer is corrected, move on. You haven't done something terrible, you just need to serve your audience by printing a correction. The kind of things where there is a sense that there is a recklessness or a wilfulness about the inaccuracy, that's where I do object, that's where I really do think it is poisoning the news supply.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I understand the distinction and that's a very, very important distinction. Obviously, the complaints that you make about the mismatch between headlines and material or other egregious errors of fact fall very squarely within what should be a "regulated" and I'll put that word in inverted commas before somebody says I've gone somewhere world. But one has to make sure that one doesn't create a system that inhibits freedom of expression.
MR MOY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
As an uncovenanted consequence of trying to cope with the problems to which you refer.
MR MOY
Yes.
DR MOORE
Absolutely, and if I could add to the previous point, I don't want to sound too much like an evangelist in the sense that the Internet has all the answers, but at the very least, one of the things that there is an opportunity now, which there wasn't before, is for enormously more transparency and accountability in the sense of being transparent about the sources of articles and being accountable in a sense of making it easy for people to indicate if there are mistakes or to indicate that there has been some form of misrepresentation. Unfortunately, there are not many big mainstream organisations that are doing this. There are many smaller organisations and individuals who are, but in the main, many of the big organisations, bizarrely in my view because it seems to me to actually enhance their credibility and their accountability, but very few of them have adopted most of these.
MR MOY
I think just picking up on the freedom of speech point, I don't see effective regulation as opposed to freedom of speech and I think that terror sounds far larger in theory than it is when it's practised by people with goodwill and sensible intentions and when you start looking at specific examples, I think it becomes clearer and less terrifying. But one of the answers to the freedom of speech problem is that part of the right way to deal with this is for ideas to be contested for a civil society, which I mentioned on the page of my submission that we're on at the moment, to be active in challenging misinterpretations in public life. As you've heard, that's largely not true. Civil society currently doesn't feel able to or doesn't feel invited to or doesn't feel a responsibility to be challenging misleading claims in public life. That's something that needs to be understood as to why that might be happening, and if we got to a stage where that was corrected, I think we'd be a lot further on in having a dynamic society, if you like, where the kind of interplay of pressures works out for the best.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Mm.
MR JAY
The next subheading is "Changes to the legal framework", which I think we're going to have to just touch on. Dr Moore, paragraphs 58 to 64 in particular, page 10 on the internal numbering, where you draw attention to some continental examples and a Commonwealth example. The Finnish example we may have to look at in some detail because on the face of it, it looks quite interesting. Obviously the Irish example we're getting evidence on and the New Zealand example will be available no doubt online for us to consider.
DR MOORE
Can I make one point about the New Zealand example because one of the reasons I think it's particularly interest, it's a very recent report in December so it takes into account some of the things that have been happening in this country. One of the ways in which I was impressed they looked at it was rather than thinking about the constraints on journalism and some of the arguments that have been made about this Inquiry necessarily being about constraining free press and free speech, they look at it really from an entirely different direction and they say: how can we expand, how can we give the privileges that are currently given to mainstream journalism to anyone who is doing journalism? And they talk particularly about the legal privileges, but they cite other ones as well. As part of that, they start almost from ground zero. They say what is the news media and how do we define it and once we've defined it, then how can we make that definition encompass all those who want to contribute to the fourth estate and to this sphere?
Q. Thank you. The essential ingredients of a desirable regulatory framework, Dr Moore first of all, page 11 of your report, paragraphs 66 to 70, you are not comfortable with the notion of a full statutory regulator, that is understood. But you say in paragraph 67: some statutory basis will be necessary in order to incentivise or require news organisations to participate to provide the necessary powers to oversee and enforce the code and provide for independence." So you're drawing a distinction there between framework and procedure and substance, and you're making it clear that the statutory regulator would not be involved in matters of substance, namely what the standards should be. Is that correct?
DR MOORE
That's correct. I think this requires a little bit of context in that the Media Standards Trust which formed a review group to write this report in 2009 has formed a very similar review group with many of the similar people participating, specifically to look at and detail evidence-based recommendations for a new system, and is planning to do that in May of this year. So these are necessarily initial thoughts around that.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
When you say planning to do that in May, planning to publish it in May?
DR MOORE
Sorry, submit it to the Inquiry and publish it more widely, but certainly submit it. We're doing some research specific to that, which we'd be happy to put in beforehand, in relation to some of the mechanisms people have already talked about, particularly around the infamous sticks and carrots, so looking, for example, at the question of VAT, zero-rating and understanding (a) if it's even possible and (b) what it actually means in terms of the amounts
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
For what it's worth, the provisional views that I've received are that it is not possible to distinguish between different types of identical provision namely a newspaper that might satisfy certain conditions above others for VAT purposes.
DR MOORE
Thank you. We've received different advice, some of which has said that if they can distinguish between a cake and a biscuit, then they can distinguish between different newspapers. I believe there are European precedents for distinguishing between for example, I think it's it in Belgium and Denmark, they can distinguish between different types of publication, but I thank you for your advice
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'm not giving you advice, I'm merely telling you what I have been told, because it won't surprise you that when this idea was first suggested, my immediate question was: does this work as a matter of law? If you have some advice that says that it does work as a matter of law, I would be very interested in seeing it.
MR MOY
May I ask, if it's not impertinent, whether the Inquiry will be publishing that advice?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I've not got formal material yet. I just needed to know whether this was a route down which I should go.
MR MOY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I have absolutely no doubt that it is going to have to be addressed by the Inquiry, and it will be addressed with chapter and verse. So that requires European law and domestic tax law.
MR JAY
Dr Moore, you make it clear in paragraph 68 that for reasons of principle and practicality you'd favour a voluntary system in the first instance and the purpose of the statutory basis is some sort of backstop if people do not participate. Have I correctly understood it?
DR MOORE
Voluntary for reasons of principle and practicality. It seems to us that in a digital world, it's both extremely undesirable in principle to try and compel people to be part of the system and very difficult in practice to work out (a) where you draw the line around them and (b) what do you do about those people who sit outside the line and refuse to or refuse to come in, and I think there it seems to us you quite quickly get into a pseudo licensing system, which we think would be a very bad idea, when you're telling people if they're not coming in the system that they can't publish, and I think that would be very detrimental to free speech. However, if one accepts that and one accepts that the system has to be voluntary, then one necessarily has to start thinking how to make it incentivised enough that people the people that you want to be inside are inside, and that's where it comes, I think, necessarily, to thinking about both non-statutory and statutory mechanisms to try and make it carroty enough.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But there would have to be statutory mechanisms if and one of the examples or possibilities that I've discussed is recognising in court the views of a regulator, a system of regulation, whether as to benefit or as to avoiding the risk of exemplary damages. There are lots of possibilities.
DR MOORE
Absolutely.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But that would require, unless you're going to tell me something different, it seems to me it would require some form of statute around it, otherwise I don't see how a court or adjudicator could take it into account.
DR MOORE
No, I agree, but I think that there are statutory mechanisms which can be incentives and non-statutory ones as well. So the three levers, as I see it, that one can pull, one is legal, which is around possible recognition within law such that it's taken into account or even possibly separate tribunal; the second is fiscal, and VAT is one but there are others that have been suggested around advertising; and the third is around the access to information, which was brought up by Mr Dacre earlier this week. It seems to me that those are the three levers, and how one pulls them, I entirely agree, particularly the first time, require some sort of statutory basis. The third perhaps less so.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But what you're saying is this isn't statutory regulation at all; this is recognition in a statute of a different type of system.
DR MOORE
Exactly, like in Ireland in Section 44 of the Defamation Act.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But the critical thing about that would be that the statute would have to identify what it is recognising.
DR MOORE
Yes, as it does in some detail in the Irish Defamation Act.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I understand, I understand, I understand.
MR JAY
Mr Moy, your evidence only touches on this.
MR MOY
We'll be submitting further evidence for modules three and four.
Q. Thank you very much. But is there anything you would like to say at this stage? You touch on it on page 53819, where you refer to privileges which are only justified for those outlets with a demonstrated commitment to press standards, but no doubt you'd wish to elaborate on that in writing in due course, as you've indicated.
MR MOY
Yes. I think sort of the logic of that to some extent perhaps speaks for itself. The main thing we'd say about statutory regulation at the moment is, to coin a phrase, we agree with Lord Justice Leveson that it's been a bit dismal watching a sort of binary debate between statutory and non-statutory when that seems fairly useless. We have, as Lord Justice Leveson has noted, statutory judicial appointments, a statutory guarantee of judicial independence, we have a statutory guarantee of academic freedom. The people who safeguard the people who are in mental health detention are a statutory body, and that liberty, that freedom, is just as important as freedom of the press and those people are far more vulnerable than newspaper editors and proprietors. So it's simplistic to simply say anything involving statute is terrible, and it would be helpful to have a debate about how we achieve the required ends that reflects that, and that certainly is what we're thinking about at the moment. The other point that came up I think in Lord Grade's evidence, he was very worried about exposure to judicial review. In our conversations with the PCC, we have always been told that they accept that they are subject to judicial review, and we've asked on several occasions. I don't know if you asked them that question yourselves. But they have never, I know, admitted it in court and I know it has never been decided by
Q. I did ask them that question and the answer was possibly somewhat confidential. That's why I didn't go down that road. I asked that question behind the scenes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
On the law, I'm likely to be able to work that out myself.
MR MOY
I'm sure. But their point being that they have accepted it, at least in what they have said to us. It seems a slightly strange worry to put people off statutory regulation, if that was indeed Lord Grade's principal objection. Nonetheless, it would be much preferable to see a system which kept politicians away from regulating the press as far as possible, and we look forward to seeing what the industry comes up with.
MR JAY
Thank you. Mr Moy, you have some ideas in relation to the code of practice at 53818.
MR MOY
Yes.
Q. You rightly point out that it's a strong document in many ways, but there are particular areas which give rise to concern. Some of these areas have been constant themes in the evidence adduced before this Inquiry.
MR MOY
Yes.
Q. The due prominence issue, which might need to be more prescriptive; is that right?
MR MOY
I think you'll find a much more helpful guide to our view on the Editors' Code in our submission at tab 16.
Q. Thank you.
MR MOY
Which is our answer to your 12 questions.
Q. It's 54645?
MR MOY
54643 is the beginning of that answer. Obviously our expertise in the code of practice is specific to clause 1. On the other hand, that's the vast majority of what the PCC does. You've heard, I think, on several occasions about the code of practice is a strong document. The people who think that are, with respect, wrong. It's a perfectly reasonable thing to think, but you only think it when you look at it theoretically. From the point of view of people who actually have to make complaints under the code, it's an obscure document and a very hard one to work with, so when you ask a group of academics are these basically the right principles, then they say yes, and quite reasonably, they're absolutely right. But when you try to work with it in practice, it's actually very tricky. Before I go on to what's missing from it, if you look at all the key concepts in clause 1, misleading and distorted, completely undefined and don't seem to be interpreted particularly consistently. There's no explicit burden of proof, it's not clear where the burden of proof lies. In our experience, the burden of proof has always lain on the complainant, not on the newspaper, which is contrary to what is said in the Editors' Code book, which frankly bears very little relation to how the code seems to be interpreted in practice. There is no standard of proof. I think this is a fairly extraordinary lapse. So when the PCC is asked to make adjudications, all of that is sort of left hanging, and the adjudications without those concepts being clear can't possibly be clear themselves, and I think even the PCC probably finds this a difficult feature, and certainly we've never found their adjudications clear and I think that's the reason why. So we have put in a submission to the current review of the Editors' Code saying that clause 1 needs to be overhauled, not because it's driving at the wrong things, it's absolutely not, but because actually in practice it's rather obscure and rather difficult to work with.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
One has to be a bit careful one doesn't create the Maltese penal code. That's not showing a disrespect
MR MOY
The what, sorry?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I'm not showing a disrespect to Malta, but the point I'm making is that one doesn't want a document that is so complex because it's covering each and every possibility that it isn't really possible to navigate through for the public.
MR MOY
No, absolutely, but equally a document that specifies neither the burden nor the standard of proof is pretty hard to work with in practice.
MR JAY
You make other points. I'm now on 53818 in relation to headlines, which is a point we have been exploring.
MR MOY
Yes.
Q. And then you say: "A persistent practice of running stories that are inaccurate with a final very late paragraph which effectively invalidates the story", and there have been examples of that put before the inquiry.
MR MOY
What's known as the paragraph 19 problem, common enough to have its own name. But what that highlights is the lack of a positive duty in clause 1 of the code. What we don't have in the code is an expectation that the role of journalism is to provide its readers with the best available version of the truth, which is a phrase in common use among journalists, and absolutely the right expectation for what journalists should strive to do. And when we're assessing accuracy, we should be asking the question of have we here succeeded in providing the best available version of the truth, and we should have that as our ambition. If you had that in place, of course paragraph 19 would be a clearcut case. What you've effectively done is a sleight of hand there. You're playing tricks. You're saying here's an exciting story and then you're saying at the end well actually no it's not. That may not be inaccurate within the purely negative terms of current code of practice, but it is nonetheless failing to inform your audience and if that was the expectation set forward in clause 1, then a lot of these playing tricks, playing to the letter of the law rather than to the spirit of the law, would go. Would be very easily dealt with. I think time and time again, our frustration with the existing system is that it seems to assume good faith on the part of newspapers which just isn't there.
Q. Thank you. In terms of
MR MOY
Sorry, I should qualify that, I noticed a raised eyebrow, quite rightly: which just isn't there in some cases. You can't rely on it being there.
Q. Yes. Bottom of page 53816, tab 13, Mr Moy, you make some suggestions about what a regulator should be able to do: Impose deadlines for responses?
MR MOY
Yeah, I'm with Martin on that.
Q. Tackle abuse of its processes, maximise the transparency of its process. You deal with burden and standard of proof issues which you've touched on. Pursue an inaccuracy even without a member of the public willing to argue through the rounds with the newspaper. This is the third-party issue?
MR MOY
Absolutely vital. I can't stress this enough. If a newspaper has been told that there's a serious problem with a headline and a regulator is aware of this, the fact that the complainant then goes away doesn't mean that the problem has gone away, it doesn't mean that the disservice to the audience has gone away and increasingly with online publication it doesn't mean that the article has gone away either. The idea that the regulator just well, it's not a regulator, this is the essential point of it not being a regulator. A regulator would pursue the problem. A complaint-handling body pursues the complaint.
Q. Can I just ask you to address the penultimate bullet point: "Reject newspapers' proposed resolutions as insufficient in the public interest."
MR MOY
Yes.
Q. What happens if the complaint is about privacy rather than inaccuracy? I know you're primarily concerned with inaccuracy, but why isn't a resolution of a privacy complaint one which is in the public interest to resolve consensually rather than by an adjudication?
MR MOY
I didn't say it wasn't. We're suggesting this as a power they should have, not something they should do with a swinging axe. What we have in mind is cases we've been through where the first offer you get is, "We'll amend the headline online only". Then you get the offer of "We'll print a letter from Full Fact disagreeing with our article but we won't change the article or admit there was anything wrong with it". Then you get page 12, then you get page 6, then you get page 4, then you get page 2. All of this, rounds and rounds of correspondence, weeks between them, takes forever, deeply tiring. And all of this, of course, after the actual inaccuracy has been accepted. At this stage, you're just arguing over prominence. You've already talked about the PCC should just be able to say, "This is how prominent it should be". Maybe that's the right answer, but at the very least they ought to be able to reject derisory offers. I should highlight in that sequence the letter because the code says you have to correct inaccuracies. A letter from somebody else disagreeing with your article isn't correcting an inaccuracy, even though it's routinely accepted as a method of correcting a general inaccuracy.
Q. You're going to have to slow down. I know we're reaching the end of our allotted slot, but I'm afraid you are going too fast now.
MR MOY
A letter isn't a correction. It's just a letter.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I understand.
MR JAY
Dr Moore, I know you wish to elaborate these issues further in another submission, but you touch on the principles, just so that we know where we are in the final page of your statement, and you probably don't wish to speak to those, you want to do so in a more considered written submission in due course in relation to module four; is that right?
DR MOORE
That's true, but I suppose one thing that we didn't we touched on regulation, but one of the key points that I tried to make in this submission was that it seems to me that there are two slightly overlapping but separate roles that I hope the Inquiry will look at, one of which is around initiating genuine reform as to the legal framework and the second is about the regulatory framework.
Q. Yes.
DR MOORE
On the first, I think it's just extremely important to continue to emphasise that there is an opportunity and a need to defend journalism in the public interest better than it currently is and that means defending it better within the law. I think by doing that not only does one protect good journalism and good journalists. Actually, you also start to better define the line between the public and the private, and which is where I think we're hopefully going to get to.
Q. Thank you very much. Each of you is proposing stronger sanctions for the regulatory body. That might be said goes without saying?
MR MOY
So is the industry. I think that's now uncontroversial.
Q. I don't think it's necessary to go into that. And Mr Moy, you've put in a helpful submission on the Internet, which again I'm afraid we never were going to have time to go into but have carefully read. Finally, Dr Moore, I should make it clear I've received several questions from another core participant. I'm going to make the executive decision, unless I'm overruled, that I'm not going to ask you to deal with those now, since it would take frankly too long and may or may not be helpful, but what I am going to ask you to do, if you're prepared to do it, is to address these questions in writing and if it's necessary to deal with them other than by putting in further written evidence from you we'll consider that. Are you content with that course?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Have you raised it with the core participant?
MR JAY
I haven't, no. It's right to say I haven't. I was hoping to leave some time.
MR CAPLAN
Can I interrupt. I think I should identify myself.
MR JAY
I kept you anonymous.
MR CAPLAN
That's fine, but obviously the answers will be published
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Of course they shall.
MR CAPLAN
Thank you.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I think that's quite a useful idea. Does that conclude?
MR JAY
It does. I am conscious of the fact I should have left some time to deal with Mr Caplan's points, but I haven't, and therefore
MR MOY
Can I just make one last point?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Please.
MR MOY
I'm sorry to intrude on your time.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Don't worry.
MR MOY
I feel we should emphasise that real harm is done by points of general inaccuracy, and I know the Inquiry has largely focused on individual named and nameable victims, but we see not just the harmful effects on policy and government making decisions which perhaps it might otherwise not make if better information was put in front of it, and not just the effect in terms of spreading cynicism and unwillingness to engage in public life, but also real damage apparently being done, real hurt being felt by groups of people, and while it's not our job to bang that drum, I thought that needed to be mentioned and I don't think anyone else is going to do it.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I think they have, actually.
MR MOY
I mention that for a specific reason, which is that we will always prioritise freedom of speech over a rigorous commitment to accuracy, of course we will. We're an organisation that exists to take part in the severe contest of ideas and to, if you like, be the free speech remedy to inaccuracy. But perhaps when you're wondering where is the balance between the two, it is slightly nudged further over when you realise that inaccuracies do do real harm, more than perhaps we recognise as we become increasingly inured and cynical to misleading use of information in public life.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. I don't think it's fair to say we've not thought about inaccuracy. I'm not suggesting you were quite saying that. Because indeed some of the groups who have come to give evidence have focused on rock solid inaccuracy. But I'm very conscious that inevitably those who are complaining about the work of the press were really complaining about individual circumstances rather than generic issues.
MR MOY
Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
So I do have the point. Thank you.
MR MOY
Thank you.
DR MOORE
May I raise two final points?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
DR MOORE
The first is that I sincerely hope that the Inquiry does take the opportunity for positive and radical change, not just in terms of better protecting the public, but in better protecting journalism in the public interest. The second is a plea to not accept as a fait accompli the recommendations necessarily of others, ourselves included. We have and are still doing research on the history of this and I know you've referred to it a number of times in the past, but it does seem to me as though there is a really rather significant danger that the Inquiry, if not extremely careful, could go down a very similar path to the three Royal Commissions and the Calcutt review of the last 60 years.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That is constantly in my mind, Dr Moore. I have two issues to raise, very shortly. The first is a refrain that I've received from several editors is: "Well, the answer for the public is very simple. They don't need to buy the newspaper. And they show by buying the newspaper that they like what we do and the way we do it". I would be interested for your comments on that. And then I have one other question for you, but if you have any comment on that, I'd be interested to receive it.
DR MOORE
Two. The first is that it seems to me as though the argument that the public buy it and therefore it's okay seems to me to be rather moot when one looks at what happened when the public found out how the stories were gathered in July and a paper closed within four days. I think if there was an awful lot more transparency, the public might feel very different about the product they were buying, in the same way one feels about the food you're buying in the supermarket according to the label that's on the food. I think there is an argument there. The second is that in the five and a half years that I've been doing this, one of the things that struck me is that people of course care about the gas bill and they care about the day-to-day things in their lives and people around them. They don't entirely understandably they don't notice media coverage per se until it's of direct relevance to themselves or people close to them when it is it can be enormously damaging, not just hurtful, but materially damaging to them personally. But in the main, most people, thankfully, never experience that, never go through that.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right. Do you want to comment on that?
MR MOY
I endorse what Dr Moore has said. I'd also point out, as I just did, that the damage that newspapers and anyone who commands mass attention can do isn't limited to the people who read them.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
All right. My second question is this: have either of your organisations met Lord Hunt?
DR MOORE
Yes. Lord Hunt invited myself and our chair, Roger Graef, to meet him and Stig Abell, I think it was November. It was before he had devised the plan that he has now, but to discuss openly some of the thoughts that we had and some of the possible models that will emerge.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Could I ask you both to continue that dialogue with Lord Hunt and I will ask him to do the same.
MR MOY
We haven't met him.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
You haven't?
MR MOY
No. I met Stig Abell and heard about the proposals earlier last month, but I haven't met Lord Hunt, although I know one of my trustees has talked to him.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I've made it abundantly clear that this solution, whatever it comes to, has to work for all the reasons, Dr Moore, that you've just mentioned. That means it has to work for the industry, but it also has to work I've said it has to work for me, rather grandly representing the public, but your organisations have both thought about these issues for many years and will have very developed views and perspectives which are for me forming rather than formed, and I am sure that the product will be better for your input than without it.
DR MOORE
Thank you.
MR MOY
If I may briefly respond to that, because our expertise is how the system works in detail, and at the moment I would say what we've heard from Lord Hunt isn't structurally flawed, but I think at the moment there's a greater chance that the details get worked out in a way that will completely fail than there is that they will be worked out in a productive way.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I think I said either to Lord Hunt or Lord Black that the devil was indeed in the detail. But this is an iterative process for return to the Inquiry and all I'm saying is I'd be grateful if your organisations were involved in these iterations.
MR MOY
Thank you.
DR MOORE
Thank you.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Thank you very much. We'll take a break. (11.47 am) (A short break) (11.57 am)
MR BARR
Sir, good morning. Our next witness is Carla Buzasi.
MR CAPLAN
Sir, may I very briefly and in a noncontroversial way return to the agenda tomorrow afternoon?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR CAPLAN
One procedural matter first, please. Would it please be your order that Mr Dacre's supplementary statement can now be published
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR CAPLAN
Thank you very much. The second matter, please, is this, I'm not asking for a ruling, just my understanding, and that is that tomorrow he is coming back to deal with the "mendacious smear" matter, the Mail on Sunday story concerning the plummy-voiced executive and the allegation of phone hacking by Mr Grant. I say that because it's in everybody's interests that Mr Dacre has had the opportunity to look at any material that is necessary for tomorrow afternoon.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, that's as I understand it, and I notice Mr Crossley is nodding.
MR CAPLAN
Nodding. And that the material which he needs to look at and refresh his memory about are his own statements, Mr Grant's statements and Ms Hartley's statements. If there is any other material, I would be very grateful to have the opportunity to see it, in case he needs to access anything else, and I do ask Mr Crossley to let me know if possible, please, by lunchtime.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
There were some other statements I think submitted, but I am sure that that will be thought about during the course of the morning. Thank you very much indeed.
MR CAPLAN
Thank you very much indeed.
MR CROSSLEY
The only thing I would add is if Mr Grant's statement could also be published.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. I think I actually did say that, but it was quite late. Right. MS CARLA SAMANTHA BUZASI (sworn) Questions by MR BARR
MR BARR
Sit down and make yourself comfortable.
A. Thank you.
Q. Could you tell the Inquiry your full name, please?
A. Carla Samantha Buzasi.
Q. And you are I should ask also the witness statement that you provided to the Inquiry, are the contents true and correct to the best of your knowledge and belief?
A. They certainly are.
Q. You are the editor-in-chief of the Huffington Post UK?
A. Yes, that's correct.
Q. And the Huffington Post is an online publication which is owned ultimately by AOL Incorporated?
A. Yes, that's right.
Q. A large American company?
A. Yes.
Q. There's an intermediary, AOL (UK) Limited, which owns Huffington Post UK?
A. Yes.
Q. You've worked with AOL since August 2010, and in your role as editor-in-chief you supervise a team of journalists and editors who are based in London publishing content aimed at a British audience?
A. Yes, that's true.
Q. Previously, you worked as the associate editor and online editor at Marie Claire, and before that in a number of roles with Conde Nast's digital team?
A. Yes.
Q. Can I ask you about the Huffington Post. Can you give us an indication of the sort of circulation that the UK edition has?
A. Yes. In December, we had just over 4 million unique users, so that's people who have come to the site. They may have come a number of times during that month, but we would count them just once. So that was global people to the UK site. Within the UK it was 2.7 million people visiting the Huffington Post properties.
Q. And the publication itself is solely online, isn't it?
A. Yes, absolutely.
Q. And it's in the form, if I can suggest this to you, effectively of a Sunday newspaper every day in that it has very many sections?
A. Yes. So we span news, politics, entertainment, comedy, technology and international affairs as well.
Q. The source material of content for your publication comes from three sources, if I've understood correctly. First of all, there is what might be described as original content, and that's material produced by journalists employed by Huffington Post UK and working under your editorial guidance?
A. Yes.
Q. In that respect, are you effectively very much like any other newspaper in this country, save that you publish solely online?
A. Yes. No, we pride ourselves on the fact that we operate as a newspaper organisation would be. These are trained journalists who have come from backgrounds like CNN, BBC, and they're writing original reports day in and day out.
Q. In addition, the second stream of content is what might be described as curated content, and that's where your website is linking to other sites on the Internet?
A. Yes. I don't believe that any news organisation sort of has the perfect journalism and the monopoly on brilliant stories, so we do link out, make sure that our users can see the best of what's out there on the web.
Q. And then finally
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Hang on, is that to other newspapers or just to other material?
A. It could be to other newspapers, it could be other blogs, magazine sites or other material, yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But you couldn't go behind a pay wall?
A. We do sometimes link to sites like the Times, but if we did that, we would make it clear that it was going to a pay wall site therefore the user might not be able to access that information.
MR BARR
The third stream of content is that the publication hosts a blogging platform, doesn't it?
A. Yes. It's one of the things that makes the Huffington Post unique in that we open that blogging platform out to a wide range of people from MPs to Joe Bloggs on the street to people experts in their field and that makes up a significant portion of our content too.
Q. We'll come back to look of each of those three streams in more detail shortly, but before we do that, let's look at some jurisdictional matters.
A. Okay.
Q. The servers for your operation are in fact based in the United States?
A. Yes, they are.
Q. But you consider that the English courts have jurisdiction over your United Kingdom operation, and as you've told us, your journalists are based in London?
A. Yes, I think that's very important. We are a British organisation writing for a British audience, and therefore we should be covered by the British courts.
Q. Looking now, if we may, at the way in which you ensure standards, first of all with your original content, you tell us that your journalists receive regular training, that you have your own editorial guidelines, and you not only follow the PCC code but are in fact a member of the PCC?
A. Yes, absolutely. As soon as our journalists arrive with us, and as I've said, most of them have come from organisations where they would have had legal training in the past, they have legal training with us as well. We have our own in-house legal team and in some of those sessions we'll invite external counsel as well to update us on changes in policy. Our editorial guidelines, a large part of that has been framed to reflect the PCC code and therefore we felt it was important that we were signed up to the PCC as well.
Q. We'll come back to the future of regulation and talk about the PCC some more later on, but I would like to continue to explore the practices so far as your original content is concerned. You tell us that you always look to double-source articles where possible?
A. Absolutely. It's very important to me when we're building a reputation with the site that we're seen as trustworthy and we're transparent where we've got our content from. That means that we're interviewing people just as you'd expect any journalist to do on any other publication to make sure that we're factually correct.
Q. Does that mean that on occasions you might publish a single-source story if you weren't able to find a second source?
A. Yes, if we weren't able to, but I think in that instance I would need to understand why the journalist couldn't do that. That might well be because it's based on someone's specific opinion about something that's going on, but we'd certainly look to caveat that and explain why that had been the case.
Q. If you're going to publish a story, do you expect, if you feel that you need to know, to be told the ultimate source of the story? Or will you publish a story not knowing the source yourself but trusting the judgment of one of your journalists?
A. I haven't had that situation arise. I think that the relationships I have with my reporters I would expect to know the source, but in line with the PCC, we would look to protect those sources ourselves.
Q. You also tell us that you try to ensure that the subjects of your stories are given a reasonable amount of time to reply to any charges which are levelled against them prior to publication.
A. Yes.
Q. Are there any circumstances in which you have decided not to give prior notice in a case which would be invading someone's privacy?
A. No. Again that situation hasn't arisen yet. I think if it was in the public interest, we might make that decision, but our site is all about having a conversation. If we publish a story and we haven't given someone the right to reply, it's very easy for them to do that, whether they want to comment on that story or write a blog submission to the site, so I would much prefer we'd given people that opportunity before the story was published, so the conversation can start immediately.
Q. Do your journalists ever use subterfuge to obtain stories?
A. No, they don't.
Q. Do you envisage that they might do so in future?
A. No, I don't envisage that, no.
Q. Moving now from your perhaps I should just cover this before I move on to your curated content, although I can anticipate the answers. As far as you are aware, has there ever been any phone hacking at the Huffington Post UK?
A. No, absolutely not.
Q. Any blagging of confidential information?
A. No.
Q. And have any of your journalists ever paid public officials for stories?
A. No, they haven't.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
How many journalists are there?
A. I have 20 on my team. We started with eight when we launched last July, so we've grown a bit, yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Very good.
MR BARR
Moving now to your curated content, because you are linking to other people's websites, you don't have the same control over the content, do you?
A. No, we don't. I mean, there is an editorial decision behind who we link to, and that will be because it's newsworthy, we believe that our readers and users will be interested in those articles, and the prominence we give those links really depends on the story itself. We launched the day after the Guardian broke the phone hacking story, and that day our splash, the big headline on our site, linked directly to the Guardian because that was their story, they were the ones who had uncovered this, and we knew that our readers would be interested in it, so due prominence right at the top of the front page of the site was linking off to another site.
Q. Accepting that you don't have control over the content, you're obviously making a choice to link their site to yours.
A. Yes.
Q. What judgments, if any, are made to make sure that you are linking to reputable sites which are publishing accurate information?
A. I think it's an editorial decision that we make, but also at the back of our mind we always have those editorial guidelines. Is this a site that we trust? Do we believe what they've written? All of that informs that decision before we make a decision to post a link.
Q. So are there links that you think might have interested your readers that you've ruled out because you have doubts about the site or the content?
A. Yes, I expect those I can't think of any specific examples, but I think there are instances where you see perhaps something that's interesting but you don't believe where that's come from and you perhaps think that that story isn't correct, then you wouldn't link to it. Perhaps then it would be an opportunity for one of our journalists to go and do some investigation themselves and see whether it's a story that we can move on, and then it would become part of our reporting.
Q. Moving now to your blogging platform, can we explore what sort of standards you expect from your bloggers and how you go about enforcing them? First of all, you have some guidance, don't you?
A. Yes.
Q. Amongst other things, that encourages your bloggers to be themselves?
A. Absolutely.
Q. And not to impersonate
A. Yes. It's important to us that this is an area, as I said, for debate, for conversation, and the blogs are very much opinion. But we do have blogger terms and conditions that by using our blogging platform you are bound by. You are free to stop blogging for us at any time if you decide that you don't want to comply with those terms and conditions. I should stress there's not an editorial control over that. We want people to have their personalities shine through on their blogs, but there is a framework in there to ensure that we're or our bloggers are complying with the law.
Q. You do, though, permit anonymous and pseudonymous bloggers, don't you?
A. As a general rule, we would strongly encourage our bloggers to be upfront about who they are. There have been a few occasions, we have someone who blogs about the gay nightlife in London and he wants to do that anonymously. He's not naming other people, these are just his personal experiences, and in an instant like that we may allow people to blog anonymously. However, we do know exactly who that person is. We have their contact details should we need to get in contact with them.
Q. Is that the case for all of your anonymous bloggers?
A. Absolutely, yes.
Q. You have a system of pre-moderation of comments, don't you?
A. So the way so we're talking about comments on the site?
Q. Comments on the blogs.
A. Comments on the blogs, yes. Comments on blogs work exactly the same as comments on news articles. We don't actively pre-moderate through people. We have a filter tool, which a small amount of those comments go through, which would flag up swearwords, for instance, or certain word combinations, and if that filter flags those up, then those would go to a human moderator, but in line with common practice on news sites in the UK, the majority of our comments are not pre-moderated.
Q. You tell us that there is an element of peer review of comments in that people will respond if somebody posts something outrageous?
A. Absolutely. We make it very easy for somebody to flag if they feel something is inappropriate within the comments. Once that's been flagged, our aim is within 15 minutes a human moderator will check that comment and see whether it needs to be removed or not.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Would that be for privacy, libel, whatever?
A. Yes, anything that went in the face of law in this country.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
So there's a risk that you'll get something libellous up there?
A. There is a risk, yes, absolutely, but because of the way that the law is framed in this country, we are not in a position to pre-moderate all our comments.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I understand, and you know it will get back to whoever did it, whether the name is published or not, because you know who they are?
A. Yes.
MR BARR
And they've signed up to say that they're not going to post anything illegal?
A. Yes.
Q. So you have a contractual lever as well?
A. We do, we do.
Q. In case those defences you've described fail, there's a complaints procedure, isn't there?
A. There is.
Q. That applies both to the blogging content and to the original content?
A. Yes. At the bottom of every single one of our articles we have a "send a correction" button. It's important to us that people can contact us very quickly and easily in that we have a robust notice and takedown process, so that's put clearly. It's not hidden anywhere on the site, it's at the bottom of every article.
Q. And you make clear in your witness statement that you have your own in-house legal team and they have access to independent counsel as well?
A. Yes.
Q. To make judgments as to how to deal with each complaint. Can you give us some idea of the sort of volume of complaints that are made?
A. It depends. The corrections policy, we would get a number of those a day, and that might be something very small, someone spotted a spelling mistake in an article. I'm pleased to say we haven't had any significant complaints on our blogs. We haven't had any with our articles. We have had people who have come to us and, as I said in the witness statement, we've got an in-house legal team to ensure that we don't have a knee-jerk reaction to anything like that, that each complaint is considered very carefully. But we're talking on a day-to-day basis, you know, less than ten, and that's including those very small typographical errors.
Q. Is one of the reasons for this relatively benign picture that the sort of journalism that you're engaged in isn't of the sort which is pushing at the boundaries and very controversial?
A. No, I think it's that we're exceptionally careful, we're very aware that we're building a brand in this country at the moment, and therefore we need to be squeaky clean with everything we write. I don't think that means that what we're producing is bland journalism, I think it just means we're being careful to fact-check.
Q. I wasn't suggesting your content is bland, but you're not engaged in the sort of controversial investigative journalism that some other publications are?
A. No. Certainly our politics team are doing investigative pieces, but we haven't yet uncovered an MPs' expenses scandal or anything like that. We are doing investigative journalism, but nothing too scandalous.
Q. Moving now to regulation, and just to set the scene as to what a commercial enterprise this is, it's right, isn't it, that AOL bought the Huffington Post, the American entity, at least, for $315 million last year?
A. Yes.
Q. So this is big business, isn't it?
A. Absolutely.
Q. And you explain that you've joined up to the PCC. Have you met Lord Hunt to discuss the way forward?
A. No, I haven't, and I would welcome the opportunity to do that. I think it's very important. I think this has been acknowledged here by other people that digital properties, whether those are digital only or they're the digital arm of a more traditional media organisation, are given the opportunity to feed into that. We welcome the fact that we've been invited along today to have our say, but I think that what Lord Hunt's doing, as far as I can see at the moment, it's been very much with reference to the newspaper editors, and I think that and I would say this, but, you know, digital websites are the future of the media industry in this country, and I think it's important that we get consulted on that.
Q. So if I may consult you on that a little bit, can we start first of all with in your view what the ambit of future regulation should be. I ask that because you raise a point in your statement about individual bloggers, for example, who perhaps are too small and non-commercial. You think they should fall outside?
A. I think they should, because I think it shouldn't be financially prohibitive. It shouldn't be people being tied up in red tape before they want to post their first blog somewhere. As I've said, the majority of blogs are opinion pieces. These are people who have something that they want to get off their chest. They're not journalists, so they don't have that platform, as someone like myself would do, and therefore I think it's important that they should be given that voice. When the Huffington Post launched in America, there were only five people. They didn't have the might of AOL behind them as we do know, and I think we should be encouraging that kind of media enterprise. So whatever framework is put in place, I think it shouldn't be prohibitive to that. If people do want to join up, then I think it should be made extremely easy for them to do that, but if a mummy blogger somewhere wants to start a blog in their bedroom, I think we should allow them to get on and do that and not tie themselves up in paperwork before they do that.
Q. If it's going to be optional for the small blogger, what about the large media institutions? Are you of the view that in order to be credible all the major media players need to be involved?
A. I think it needs to be so held in such high regard that it would be foolish of them not to do that, and I think that the issue we have at the moment, and we've seen, is that some of those news organisations don't hold the PCC in high enough regard and that's why they've decided to opt out of it. I think there also needs to be a reflection of the people who are making up that council, that it is broad across the media industry as well. I've heard other people have been sitting in this chair talking about the fact that it should be experienced editors or ex-editors who have been doing this for a number of years, and I can see why they would make that recommendation, but I think that people throughout the industry need to be consulted. The editorial assistants who are just starting out, who understand the pressures of starting out in their careers and what they're asked to do, I think it's as important that they make up part of that body as it is editors who have been running newspapers for 30 years.
Q. In terms of you mentioned people sitting outside currently, for perhaps reasons of credibility. There are other reasons, too. For example, we've heard of people who don't want to be judged by the very people that their publications criticise.
A. Yes.
Q. How do you get around that? What I'm getting at is would the Huffington Post, do you think, object to some form of statutory underpinning and mandatory membership?
A. I think mandatory membership has its issues, and I think for some of the reasons that I've said already. I think the fact is that statutory regulation should be part of the law of the land, which everyone is bound by anyway, and I think to a certain extent, because of that, we are bound by those statutory things right now, because of the things that are illegal. It is illegal to tap phones, whether you are a journalist or a banker or, I don't know, installing someone's gas meter. You aren't able to do that. I think the law should remain as it is, but I think the body that the press is answerable to for inaccuracies and many of the other things that have been spoken about here shouldn't be bound by that.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Sorry?
A. Shouldn't be. I don't think then it should be legally binding, but I think if there are illegal practices that are going on, then obviously it should be.
MR BARR
In terms of the funding of any future system, do you have any views about how that should be pursued? Should it be the biggest pays more or should it be the person who's the subject of the most successful complaint pays more? Where do you see the best funding model?
A. I think our experience in trying to join the PCC showed that there are already flaws with that system, so we went to the PCC back in September and said, "We want to sign up, we already follow your guidelines, we want to be a member of this body", and they didn't actually really know what to do with us to begin with, so they decided, after a number of meetings, that we would be classified as regional press. Then we had to provide our figures to them and then there's a conversation about whether those figures are your international audience or your UK audience and then it was put into a pie chart or whatever and the portion that we made up of the regional press readership, that was how our fee was decided. That seemed to me at the time needlessly complex and slowed the whole process down. I can see that that's a difficult decision to be made. Readership, I'm sure, does come into it, but I think that you don't want to make it so expensive that small companies can't join, and I think probably that readership should be balanced with perhaps brand awareness as well. You know, big broadsheets might not have the readership of tabloid newspapers, but certainly as far as the UK population is concerned, that's a significant media player.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
It becomes very subjective then, doesn't it?
A. It does become subjective, which is why I think it's very, very difficult, and I can see why there were problems when we came to it, that maybe digital players need to be seen slightly differently to magazines. I can imagine magazines have far fewer complaints than newspapers because of the very nature of the content that they publish, and blogs alongside that as well.
MR BARR
Is there anything else that you'd like to add on the question of future regulation?
A. I think that and I'm sure I'm echoing what other people have said that it needs to be supportive of journalists as well. I think that it should provide training for journalists as well, and I think that if they can do that, again you're far more likely to have people want to join up, if it isn't seen as something that's just going to be slapping people's wrists every now and then. I think there has to be some carrot in there as well as stick.
MR BARR
Thank you. Those were all my questions.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
One of the issues that has been put to me during the course of the months that I have been involved in this is the economic viability of the press.
A. Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
You're in the rather unique position of having set up more recently than anybody else I've previously seen. Do I gather that there isn't a pay wall to the Huffington Post?
A. No.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
So it's free to the user?
A. Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
And therefore the economic model depends on advertising?
A. It does, yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Do you think that's going to affect the way in which one regulates, whether formally or informally? In other words, I suppose I'm really asking: do you think there is in reality any difference between what you are doing and what somebody is doing who is sending off a copy down the line to be printed around the country and then distributed to people's front doors?
A. I don't think so, in the original journalism that we produce on our site, that there should be any difference. But I believe on the blog side of it, that is different. These are not trained journalists who have gone through legal training, who have lawyers sitting 10 metres away from them, and I think that that distinction is very important. But certainly when it comes to our trained editors, they should uphold the standards that journalists on any publication would be required to.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
But presumably the standard that you would apply to the bloggers would be the same, whether they're commenting upon articles in the Guardian, the Telegraph, the Mail, which is clearly a very popular online newspaper.
A. Yes.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Or indeed the BBC.
A. Mm-hm. And I think that our comment policy and the fact that we don't pre-moderate is in line with most of those publications, and I think that's reflective of the defamation law in this country. In the US, for instance, it's very different. The Huffington Post in the US moderates most of its comments because the law is different there.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's interesting. I thought that the First Amendment made it much more easy for people to say rather more.
A. But part of the one of the things that's so important for the brand and this is worldwide is that it's a safe place for people to comment. We want people to feel that this is an environment where they're invited to do that, and they won't have people making personal attacks on them if they're expressing a strong opinion.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Oh, I see. All right. Thank you very much indeed.
A. My pleasure.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Thank you.
MR BARR
Sir, our next witness is Mr Staines. MR PAUL STAINES (sworn) Questions by MR BARR
MR BARR
Please take a seat, Mr Staines.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Mr Staines, thank you very much indeed for participating and providing the Inquiry with the benefit of your views, which come from a very different perspective to many of the others that I have received.
A. I should think so.
MR BARR
Could you confirm your full name, please?
A. Paul DeLaire Staines.
Q. Are the contents of your two witness statements true to the best of your knowledge and belief?
A. Yes, they are.
Q. Can we concentrate on your second statement, please, where you tell us a little bit about your background and current activities?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Before you do, possibly I ought to make it clear and explain that following a complaint in relation to the statement that was published, I was concerned that it had come from the Inquiry for probably obvious reasons. As soon as it became clear, which it had not become clear until a day or so into it, that it had not, that was the reason that I immediately stood down my request that you attend, because the complaint had vanished. But whether you
A. Sir, could we publish the first statement then?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I think we just have.
A. Oh, okay.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I think by answering the question that you did, whether your statements were accurate, we are now intending to put those into the public domain.
A. Good.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
And you're free, of course, to comment, although I think you probably have been.
A. Well, I haven't been free, because you put a restriction order censoring me.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Free to comment.
A. The terms of the restriction order didn't allow me to comment on the evidence.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Well, carry on.
MR BARR
Until it was published, which it just has been.
A. Thank you.
Q. You are here because you currently run the Guido Fawkes website, and you do that with Mr Cole and a cartoonist; is that right?
A. Correct.
Q. Before that, you've had one of the more diverse career histories of the witnesses before the Inquiry. You tell us that between 1986 and 1990, you worked in politics, think tanks and campaigns. Between 1989 and 1991 you organised mass attendance dance music raves. Between 1992 and 1994, you were a professional gambler. Then between 1995 and 2001, you were a derivatives broker, bond dealer, hedge fund trader in London, Hong Kong and Tokyo. You were then a litigant in a protracted commercial dispute for two years, before commencing publication of the Guido Fawkes political blog in 2004, and since then, since 2006, you've supplemented that activity by being an investment adviser to online ventures; is that correct?
A. That's correct.
Q. Moving to a little detail about the Guido Fawkes website, its raison d'etre is to publish political tittle-tattle, gossip and rumour?
A. Yes.
Q. And you pride yourself in breaking news stories and your success stems from doing that time and time again, you say, until well, beating big news organisations to stories.
A. Yeah, I think we have a record of that. I think the BBC's Mark Thompson explained in a speech why we do beat them.
Q. Your economic model is combined of advertising and story-broking, isn't it?
A. Yes. I'd say they're roughly equal, the amount of advertising revenue and the amount we get from selling stories.
Q. Your current readership is what?
A. Daily: 50,000 to 100,000.
Q. And at times when you are breaking big news stories, what sort of visitor rates do you attract then?
A. I think at the peak we were getting 100,000 an hour. In an average month, we would have certainly hundreds of thousands, maybe up to a million readers, or a million different browsers come to our website.
Q. You operate also on Twitter. How many followers do you have?
A. 60,000-odd.
Q. In obtaining readers, how important is the role of search engines in directing computer users to your material?
A. On a day-to-day basis, I'd say between 25 and 35 per cent of the traffic comes via search engines, particularly Google. If people are searching for a story that is of the moment, you know, if they're researching for Leveson Inquiry today, then they would arrive to us via Google.
Q. You tell us in addition to covering political tittle-tattle, gossip and rumour, you are increasingly commenting on and analysing the media industry.
A. Well, currently we have a situation where the media and politics are overlapping quite heavily, and we have great fun teasing some of our media rivals.
Q. You say that you often publish articles about media personalities and say what others are afraid to say for career reasons. That is an issue which is of some interest to the Inquiry. Are you able to help us, from your knowledge of the industry: how prevalent are career fears for those who are considering speaking out?
A. I think there's a reluctance to damage your career prospects by writing about your rivals, when one year you might be writing for the Times, the next year you might be working for the Guardian, so people are reluctant to put their name to stories attacking rivals. I deal mainly with political journalists, and quite often they'll stick the knife into each other via me and won't have their fingerprints on the story.
Q. How real do you think the consequences are for journalists who speak out? What I'm getting at is: are these fears, which you tell us about, subjective or is there an objective justification for them? Do journalists who speak out suffer consequences?
A. No, journalists have very thin skins and they hold a grudge, so definitely it might damage your career prospects. I think that's part of the problem this Inquiry has had with getting people to go on the record and say that at their publication there was hacking going on or blagging going on, because the only people I see come forward are people who have no longer got careers in active journalism. So people who are still in the business are reluctant to admit to what's been going on.
Q. You have certainly said on the Internet that your inspirations editorially are Kelvin MacKenzie and Popbitch. Is that right?
A. That's correct. Camilla, who is the boss of Popbitch, is a friend and has given me advice over the years, and I'd say that Kelvin MacKenzie is our lodestar.
Q. The nature of your work gives rise, doesn't it, to a number of stories coming your way which are single-sourced?
A. Yeah, quite often there's only one source in the room who can provide us with the information, so we have no choice. We don't rely on single-sourcing from people we don't know. There has to be some authority to that person or we have to have a level of trust built up over time. If someone came in fresh and was a single source and we couldn't verify in any way whatsoever, I'd be very reluctant to run with it.
Q. What I was coming to is Mr McKenzie has become of interest because he's given evidence about "lobbing stories in" if they "felt right". I wanted to know whether, in relation to dealing with single-source stories, you follow that lodestar or whether at that point you would depart company and
A. Depends. If it's a trivial story, you know, an amusing story that's of no consequence, I'd be willing to go with it on that basis. If it's a career-ending story or a story of great import, then I'd be very reluctant to go forward on that basis.
Q. You tell us a little bit about the technological set-up of your website, and in particular the fact that your servers are in the USA. Is it right that initially you used Google to host your site and that you've since moved away from that?
A. Originally I was on Google's free Blogger system. When they became more willing to give in to legal threats, I thought it would be a good moment to switch from them to a hosting provider who was robust and would stand up for my First Amendment protections.
Q. So the position now is you have a smaller, independent American entity hosting your website from the United States?
A. Correct.
Q. And I think you make no bones about it: you have done that to make it more difficult for people in this jurisdiction to challenge what you publish?
A. Partly, and partly because of the experience of Wikileaks and I just don't want all of a sudden to have the website disappear because someone's made a what I would view as a spurious threat.
Q. You go on at the bottom of the first page of your witness statement to tell us that you've been the subject of many threatened legal actions, although none has ever succeeded in the UK courts, and you go on to say that you've repeatedly ignored injunctions and orders issued in the UK courts with no adverse consequences. I'd like to explore that in a little more detail, please, starting first with: what sort of volume of complaints do you receive from lawyers?
A. There was a period a few years ago where we would get sent To Whom It May Concern injunctions, ie we weren't named, we were informed that we weren't to report about this matter or that matter, and that died off after I wrote to a couple of the law firms saying that if they sent us that, then we would consider it on its merits, and I thought quite often the first I knew about these matters was receiving the To Whom It May Concern injunction, so as of about the Ryan Giggs time, I haven't received a single injunction.
Q. You've been the subject of an injunction which was granted on an interim ex parte basis in Ireland, but that injunction was subsequently not made permanent.
A. I was injuncted in three jurisdictions by Zac Goldsmith and his sister, Jemima Khan. This was obviously before she became a freedom-of-information campaigner. It was done on Christmas Eve in the year it was. I was quite surprised they managed to get a High Court judge out on Christmas Eve in Dublin. I got no warning. They made undertakings to the court to produce evidence that I had got the material that they claimed I had got. The judge on that basis gave them an interim injunction. In between Christmas and January 4, when it was held over, we had communications directly through myself and Zac, and it was agreed that they would drop it, and when they came back to the court and were unable to provide any evidence, they got a judicial bollocking from an Irish High Court judge.
Q. Have there been other attempts overseas to obtain injunctions against you?
A. Not that I'm aware of. I've had communications sent to me at my Irish address that have never proceeded.
Q. You mentioned Ryan Giggs a moment ago. What role did you play in relation to speculation as to his identity whilst it was protected by an injunction?
A. I can't remember exactly. I think on Twitter I devised a five-a-side football team of various footballers and suggested they should play, and suggested two managers, on Twitter, who might also manage that five-a-side football team, and nothing came of it.
Q. Do you know whether attempts were made to make something come of it?
A. Well, I couldn't afford the footballers for a start, but there were various threats from Schillings in the press, but nothing happened. They said they were going to contact Twitter, but there was no follow-up. If there was, I wasn't aware of it.
Q. Was Mr Giggs one of the team members?
A. He was.
Q. I don't think we need go into the others. In addition to that activity, can I take you to a couple of examples in the bundle of things you've published? Can we go first of all to tab 4 and look at a page that's right at the very back of tab 4. This concerns Wikileaks. It's a post from February 242008, entitled, "Supporting Wikileaks and freedom of speech": "Guido is showing Wikileaks some love with Google Juice. The IP address [then there's an IP address] is the Internet postcode for Wiki. A judge has ordered the web authorities to remove the website url address from the Internet, so this is the only way directly [to] access it now. This is where Guido uploads important documents (like that Northern Rock memo) and others they don't want you to see Can I take it from that that what you were doing was making available to those who read your blog material which a court had ordered should be removed from the Internet?
A. Yeah, this was I think, if I recall correctly in relation to the Merrill Lynch memo, which was a document produced by Merrill Lynch concerning the prospects for Northern Rock, in which they outlined how it may result in costs to the taxpayer of ?50 billion. The FT first published it online and were immediately hit with injunctions. I also got a copy of the memo. I wrote a story and took the precaution of uploading the memo, since I think it was Carter Ruck were very busy on this, on a foreign website and linked to that, and I think uploaded it in different locations around the globe as the day went on, so Carter Ruck were chasing or whichever law firm it was various hosting agencies around the world, and when that became boring, I gave it to Wikileaks.
Q. So is it the reality that, however prestigious the lawyers, the modern Internet, with its global reach, is such that if someone is determined to put information out there and keep it there by reposting it, or whatever other mechanism, in practice it can be made to happen?
A. I think it's impossible for them to do anything. I would basically upload it to free hosting services after the close of business hours, so if the law firm was contacting Yahoo India, they would find no one at home and it would be up on that website until the next day at the very least.
Q. So in taking this action, you were effectively deciding practically to thwart what the court was trying to achieve?
A. Yeah.
Q. And you were doing that for what reason?
A. Because I think when you're considering ?50 billion of the public's money, the public has a right to know what's going on, and there was no democratic reason why this should be done in secret. This was the taxpayer's money and it was a lot of money. Something that I think you might have overlooked is that I'm a citizen of a free republic, and since 1922 I don't have to pay attention to what a British judge orders my countrymen to do.
Q. If we move to another example and look at tab 5, please, what I'm interested in is a document which is about halfway through and it relates to Mr Goodwin. It's dated 19 May 2011. At the top it says page 1 of 33 and at the bottom the date is 1 February 2012, the date on which it was printed out. It has a sticking plaster picture.
A. It's on the screen.
Q. Good, I see you have that. Do you have that, sir?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
No. Halfway through tab 5?
MR BARR
Tab 5. It has two images on it. One is a life insurance advertisement and the other is a sticking plaster crisscrossed. I think it's up on the screen now.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, thank you.
MR BARR
This was written after Mr Goodwin's name was in the public domain, but what you do here is repeat what you'd published beforehand. We see in italics towards the bottom of the page: "So there was this [then a number of asterisks] bloke who worked closely with another ***** colleague, they apparently began an adulterous affair not long after the *****ing crisis of 2008. He went to court to stop it getting out that he had been banging her. Because he is the most notorious ***** of his generation he also banned references to his profession let he be identified." Then afterwards you say: "Well, that went well for Fred, didn't it? Worth every penny And so, although you didn't in fact name Mr Goodwin in your post, you set out something of a riddle, which many might have been able to work out?
A. Well, I mean, I think in that particular instance he had banned references to him as a banker, and so we had to play on words, yes.
Q. At the top of just above the sticking plaster article, we see: "In March Guido told you about it, but had to adhere slightly to the courts." So I take it that you were on that occasion paying at least some attention to the legal status of the information?
A. Apparently we were.
Q. If we go back now to your sources, you've told us a little bit about them already. I'm looking at the second page of your witness statement. You say that about half of your sources are personally known to you. You're able to verify the provenance to varying degrees of about another 40 per cent, and then 10 per cent or less are unknown to you and you do what you can to verify what they say, and then decide whether to publish or reject their stories.
A. We get a lot of stories coming in via email. Some of those emails don't reveal the source's name and are pseudonyms. We also have a voicemail that people can use and people leave us anonymous tips on the voicemail, and also we get documents faxed to us. With those kind of anonymous tips, we will make efforts to verify the document if we can.
Q. Can I ask you now a little bit, because you deal a lot with politicians, don't you, and people moving in perhaps the Westminster village, if I put it that way: do you find that when people come forward with information they are sometimes trying to use you as a vehicle to pursue their own political agendas and to smear others?
A. I don't know about smear, but they obviously always, almost always, in fact, have an agenda. Quite often it's quite legitimate. It will be the press officers for various interests. Sometimes it is people in the same party doing down other people in that party. You know, the old saying that on the other side of the house is your opposition, but your enemy is behind you is applies in politics quite well.
Q. To what extent do you receive information which subsequently turns out to be untrue?
A. I'd say when you're dealing with politicians, quite a lot of what they tell you is untrue, particularly their denials, which subsequently turn out to be true. Over the years we've learnt who you can trust and who you can't, and how to unspin things and detect them when they're lying. Quite often it's misdirection rather than outright blatant lying.
Q. Is it right that you sometimes are fed stories by journalists in the mainstream, the old media, who are not able to get their stories into that week's edition or that day's edition and are hoping that, by feeding it to you as a blogger, the story will be kept alive until the editor can be persuaded of its merits?
A. I think that happens occasionally. There's different circumstances where it happens. Occasionally a story has been spiked. The editor for some reason doesn't want to go ahead with the story or doesn't fit their that newspaper's agenda, and they'll give it to us. I mean, that happens less now because I think we're seen as more when we were a bit of an underground publication, I think that used to happen quite often, but now most political journalists read the blog it happens less. The second type of story that's given to us is when parts of the journalist concerned couldn't get the whole story out or the editor wasn't willing to go the whole hog on a story. They'll give it to us in order to try to push the storyline further or to keep the storyline alive from one week to another week. So, for instance, a Sunday newspaper might flag up some story that they couldn't develop as fully as the journalist concerned wanted, and the editor says, "We're not going any further", but if we were to write about that story in the week, then they would say, "Look, the story is still moving, still alive, it still has the legs", as is the term used in the industry, and that might get the editor to provide resources for that journalist to continue with the story.
Q. You say in your witness statement, and I'm moving now to the question of ethics, that your ethical goal is to report the truth as you see it and that that should be the ethical goal of all journalists, whatever their medium. Can I try and expand that and put a number of ethical matters to you? I'm doing this by reference to the PCC code. I know that you're not a member of the PCC, but an important aspect of the code is the need for accuracy. Am I right to understand that you, too, think that accuracy is of great importance to ethical journalism?
A. Of course. And if you make a mistake, your readers will lose confidence in you, your reputation will go downhill. I have to say I've heard a lot of testimony from other journalists saying that what people don't realise is the speed with which we have to do things, and we quite often hit stories out, you know, five minutes after we've got the basic details, and the story will be revised and amended during the day on the fly, so we'll get the details correct and hopefully the end story will be spot on. But due to the nature of how fast we move, it's not always the first print isn't always spot on.
Q. Would it represent the position accurately to say that what you're doing is striving for accuracy rather than guaranteeing it?
A. That would be correct.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's a different issue, isn't it, for those who are in print journalism, because you have the ability to change anything you've written?
A. Yeah, we can do pixels can be altered instantly. What I'm trying to emphasise is the nature of the speed at which we work. If you have a whole day or a whole week to consider your article, you have a chance to dot the Is and cross the Ts in a way that we don't have because we're in such a hurry, and I think some of the tabloid journalists have been saying, "We do 100 stories a day", and the editors have been saying the same thing. It's not always possible to get things exactly right at speed.
MR BARR
Privacy next. That's obviously a part of the PCC code, qualified, though, by the public interest test. Am I right to understand from your witness statement that on matters of privacy you're essentially an adherent to the American school of thought, a First Amendment man rather than a fan of privacy as it's been interpreted in the English courts?
A. Yes. I particularly don't think people in public life, people who are, you know, paid for by the taxpayers, or subject to the voters, should expect the same degree of privacy as a private citizen who has no public life can expect. These people their character speaks to what the voters need to know about them as politicians, so if they misbehave in their private life it's quite common that somebody who will lie to their wife will lie to the voters. That's an old adage that has some truth to it.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
I can understand that, but it may be there isn't quite the difference that is sometimes portrayed, because you don't do stories about individuals outside the political spectrum. Or do you?
A. Very rarely do stories well, we write increasingly about journalists, but mainly it's about politicians.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
A. Invariably there is a public interest angle when you have a politician.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
That's the point. So if you're not going to go into the area, whether it's celebrity or those who have been accused of crime, all the bits and pieces that I'm sure you've heard about that I've been hearing about, you don't have to make a decision, "Is this an invasion of privacy?", because you're starting from a broadly political perspective.
A. Yeah, I'm confident that it's almost always a public interest angle. Although that's not to say that celebrities who misrepresent themselves it's not in my area of work, but some of the other celebrities who have been here and claimed to be victims, you know, like Hugh Grant, I think he did put himself out in public and he should expect to be scrutinised.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes, but, for example, there have been other people who have given evidence as victims who positively don't want to be in the public domain, they're not in the public domain. That issue for you wouldn't arise because you wouldn't be writing about them?
A. No, it's not something we cover.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes.
MR BARR
Again perhaps this question needs to be put in the context to the people that you write about. I'd like to ask you about your views on the use of subterfuge. Do you regard it as necessary to get hold of stories of public interest?
A. Sometimes. I think you have to employ a degree of subterfuge. I think the PCC ruled against the Daily Telegraph recently for when they sent two reporters to record Vince Cable's views on certain matters. I think that was perfectly legitimate what they did. They got the truth out of Vince Cable. He was saying one thing in private, another thing in public, and the PCC ruled against them for using subterfuge, but they exposed Vince Cable's duplicitousness.
Q. Do you ever use subterfuge or cause other people to use subterfuge?
A. We have. I've sent reporters in disguise. When UKIP had a policy of banning the burka, I send a female reporter dressed in a burka to interview the leader of the United Kingdom Independence Party and ask him about his worries about the Muslim Eurosceptic vote. It was I think legitimate to juxtapose him on camera with someone in a burka. It was also good fun.
Q. Do you, when you decide to use subterfuge, stop and pause for thought and try and balance the invasion and deception on the one hand against the degree of public interest in the story on the other or do you just take a view and decide on whim?
A. I think broadly correct. If we think the only way we're going to get this information is by subterfuge, then we will do that. But when we're asking people on the record questions, we do identify ourselves. We don't ring up and pretend to be a constituent when we're asking to put something on the record as a public statement. It's only when we think that they are being deceptive and the only way we can discover this deception or prove this deception is by subterfuge that we'd use it.
Q. I see, so you would require at least a reasonable suspicion that it was necessary that there was something going on that needed to be uncovered?
A. Yeah, and if we said, "We're from the Guido Fawkes blog, will you tell us what you really think?" I'm sure we wouldn't have any success, so we will endeavour to find out what we can. Quite often what we're trying to illuminate is politicians saying one thing to one set of people and another thing to another set of people. That, I think, is it's sometimes necessary to use underhand tactics.
Q. What about phone hacking? Do you think that might ever be justified?
A. I think phone hacking is against the law, and there are criminal sanctions that were available to deal with that, and we don't need to reform the Press Complaints Commission to prosecute those kind of actions.
Q. What about email hacking. Would the same apply?
A. I think the same would apply.
MR BARR
Sir, I'm about to move on to the question of complaints system, such as it is. Is that a convenient time?
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Yes. It's not inconvenient to you to come back at 2 o'clock, is it?
A. No.
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
Thank you. 2 o'clock. (1.O2 pm)