In Memoriam: Dino Balabo writes 30

COMMUNITY journalism in Bulacan has lost one of its brightest and dedicated journalists.

Dino Balabo— of Mabuhay Newspaper, Mabuhay Newspaper-Bulacan, Punto Central Luzon Newspaper, Business Week, Philippine Star and Radyo Bulacan – succumbed to a cardiac arrest early Monday morning, September 1.

In an emailed statement, the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines (NUJP) grieves at the passing of “another pillar of Philippine journalism.”

DINO BALABO | Photo from NUJP website

DINO BALABO | Photo from NUJP website

“He was the unassuming, always smiling, hardworking other half of another giant of journalism, the late Joe Pavia. Yet, notwithstanding his busy professional life, he also chose to share his expertise and love of the profession with succeeding generations as an educator at the Bulacan State University,” the statement added.

The NUJP also said that Balabo’s passing “is a great loss to the NUJP, to Philippine community journalism, and to the continuing struggle for genuine press freedom and freedom of expression in the country.”

“As we pursue our dreams of a truly free Philippine press, you and your example will always serve as in inspiration, Kasamang Dino,” NUJP added in its statement.

Below is the full text of the statement.

On the passing of esteemed community journalist Dino Balabo

Philippine journalism has lost another pillar.

Dino Balabo — of Mabuhay Newspaper, Mabuhay Newspaper-Bulacan, Punto Central Luzon Newspaper, Business Week, Philippine Star and Radyo Bulacan — is a great loss to the National Union of Journalists of the Philippines, to Philippine community journalism, and to the continuing struggle for genuine press freedom and freedom of expression in the country.

He was the unassuming, always smiling, hardworking other half of another giant of journalism, the late Joe Pavia. Yet, notwithstanding his busy professional life, he also chose to share his expertise and love of the profession with succeeding generations as an educator at the Bulacan State College.

To his family, the Bulacan journalism community, and to the people of Bulacan who he unselfishly served, the NUJP extends our deepest sympathies.

As we pursue our dreams of a truly free Philippine press, you and your example will always serve as in inspiration, Kasamang Dino.

MABUHAY KA!

For reference:
Rowena Paraan
Chairperson

VIDEO SHORT: ‘The power of truth is stronger than anything else’

THIS video short produced by PCIJ’s Julius D. Mariveles is a summary of the public lecture of journalist Hu Shuli during the Ramon Magsaysay Festival Month Lectures-Dialogue series conducted at the Asian Center of the University of the Philippines in Quezon City.

Joining Hu during the panel discussion were Melinda Quintos de Jesus, executive director of the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility; PCIJ’s Ed Lingao who has covered conflict in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Mindanao; and Professor Randy David. Moderating the session was PCIJ Executive Director Malou Mangahas.

Hu Shuli: ‘The power of truth is stronger than anything else’

By Cong B. Corrales

JOURNALIST Hu Shuli | Photo by Julius D. Mariveles

JOURNALIST Hu Shuli | Photo by Julius D. Mariveles

TRUTH-TELLING has always been at the core of journalism and “the power of truth is more powerful than anything else.”

Thus said Hu Shuli, 2014 Ramon Magsaysay Awardee, as she opened the 2014 Magsaysay Festival Month Lecture-Dialogues with her presentation “Caixin Media: Promoting Transparency and Accountability through Investigative Journalism” at the University of the Philippines Asian Center on Monday.

The lecture-dialogue was sponsored by the Ramon Magsaysay Transformative Leadership Institute in partnership with UP Asian Center, the Philippine Business for Education (PBEd) and the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ).

It the spirit of the team which has brought me here,” she said.

I became a journalist and wrote stories about fraudulent transactions of state-owned companies and challenged unwise policies through solid investigation, standards and skills, perspective and vision, and fair presentation,” she said.

After her two fellowships in the US—in 1986 and 1994—Hu decided to return to China. One of her professors at Stanford University, Lyle Nelson, discourage her decision saying: “Shuli, I respect your decision to go back to China. But it would be very hard for you. Chinese Journalism will never be part of mainstream international journalism.”

In 1998, Hu set up a finance and business magazine called Caijing, applying the highest standard to cover stories in China’s historical transition through transparent, objective, and reliable stories. Also in the 90s, China had no “real open media” and the finance industry was at its infancy.

shuli_04

Photo by Cong B. Corrales

Hu said that although journalists are not paid well in China, there is a “strong demand for the truth,” which is why Hu along and members of her team resigned from the company they worked for in 2009 and formed the Caixin Media.

We want to be trusted. We worked hard with our lawyers to protect our brand,” said Hu adding that now that they own their media outlet they have enjoyed freedom in covering stories that matter. She also said they hold this freedom carefully by being responsible in their reportage.

It was because of this conditions in China that Hu’s team said they could not afford to commit mistakes in their investigative reports. She said that they have to be “200% sure” not only of their sources but also of the documents they gather for any given report.

It was also by this time, Hu said, that the business sector in China wanted transparent, objective, and reliable news. She added that this “thirst for the truth” rippled through China’s middle-class.

Revealing the truth to the public requires layers of checking and multiple source verification. Good journalism can safeguard interests and foster changes of rules.”

She said that it was not only their credibility and reputation that is at stake but also “our hard-earned right to report.”

Hu said the missions of a journalist are to be critical thinkers, promote rational discussion, and do solid investigation.

In the dialogue portion of the program, a panel of reactors joined Hu on the center stage. These were Melinda Quintos de Jesus, executive director of the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility (CMFR), Prof. Randy David and PCIJ’s Ed Lingao.
De Jesus pointed out the importance of what Hu said about not making any mistakes in news reports and that in the Philippine context this responsibility has been taken lightly most of the time.

Let’s not waste press freedom by careless reporting,” she said.

shuli_03

Photo by Cong B. Corrales

David said that even with China having a “over-regulation on its affairs,” it would still need a feedback mechanism and this would be journalism.

Without feedback you cannot identify blind spots in your system. (Societies will be) unable to observe itself,” said David adding that he did not expect that uncompromising investigative journalism will come from China.

Lingao, on the other hand, echoed the views of Hu that in doing investigative journalism “courage alone is not enough.” However, he also said that responsibility in reporting should not be imposed by governments. He added that the Caixin experience reminds us of the dangers the community journalists have to go through in covering news stories where they have to “tip-toe around powerful political dynasties and local warlords.”

Hu replied that media outlets should be responsible for their reporters.

Outlets should ensure the safety of their reporters. As editor, we worry about our reporters. I buy insurance for my reporters,” Hu said.

She reiterated that it is “more dangerous to keep a story from being published.”

 

JOURNALIST’S TOOLBOX: Beginner’s guide to improving online security

March 5, 2014, 10:45 am

INVESTIGATIVE journalists like the members of ICIJ are facing growing concerns about security. Our members often work with leaks or other materials requiring protection of sources, collaborate across borders with colleagues at risk for their physical safety, and communicate with devices and services open to surveillance or attack.

Photo from Shutterstock

 

And that’s not to mention the growing revelations of surveillance and hacking by the U.S. National Security Agency and its allies – such as efforts to infiltrate and destroy the reputations of “hacktivists” and other targets unrelated to counterterrorism.

For journalists, the ease and low cost of communicating and sharing via e-mail, instant messaging, file sharing tools and cell phones have weighed in favor of convenience versus security. But if your reporting puts you at risk, and you need to protect your data, your sources and your stories, you can take steps to gain security savvy and reduce vulnerability.

Last week at a conference in Baltimore that broke attendance records for the National Institute for Computer Assisted Reporting (NICAR), questions about digital security sent me to sessions on surveillance, safety, privacy and anonymity and between-session conversations on security threats and solutions.

Speakers at NICAR included Jonathan Stray and Susan McGregor (Columbia Journalism School), Jennifer Valentino-DeVries (Wall Street Journal), Josh Meyer (Medill National Security Journalism Initiative) Chris Doten (National Democratic Institute), Kelley Misata (Tor Project) and Gary Price (infoDocket.com).

Here are some of the basics I learned from the experts at NICAR.

  • Protect your identity and data with better and safer passwords or 2-step verification – you log in with password and then confirm with a verification number sent to your phone.
  • Phishing – tricking a user to visit a site to enter personal information and passwords or download malware – is the most common attack. So check any link you receive in e-mail: read the URL and underlying html, don’t click on it!
  • Spear phishing – Personalized message targeting attempted by researching your information or impersonating your friends or colleagues – is growing. You may think you know the sender but it can be a hoax.
  • The weakest link: everyone in your newsroom or collaboration must use safe practices to prevent phishing attacks on others in a trusted group.
  • Encrypt everything. Make it a habit. If you use encryption all the time for communications and data, and encourage or demand it from colleagues and sources, then content will be protected and encryption can become normal behavior for journalists and the industry.
  • PGP is encryption for e-mail. OTR is Off The Record encryption for messaging, which is used by chat programs like Pidgin (PC), Adium (Mac) and CryptoCat (web based). Google “off the record” chat is NOT Off The Record (OTR).
  • Encryption is not anonymity. Encryption protects content but not the identity of the sender and recipient. To anonymize communication traffic and web browsing, go to the Tor Project, learn about the Tor network and download Tor software.
  • Having the Tor software on your computer indicates you are using anonymous communications. If this puts you at risk, you can instead use Tails – Tor on a USB stick, which leaves no trace. Find out at https://www.torproject.org.
  • Protect your data on physical devices. What if your laptop is stolen? Your USB drive? Your cell phone? What about your address book? Encrypt everything. Secure your passwords.
  • Your cell phone is a location device. It holds all your contacts. Think about security. Know where your data is and take steps to protect it.

If you want to learn more about enhancing your security online, you can get Jonathan Stray’s complete presentation “Threat modeling: Security for your story” with audio here. The Journalist Security Guide from the Committee to Protect Journalists also offers useful tips on protecting your online activities in its section on information security.

JOURNALIST’S TOOLBOX: Beginner’s guide to improving online security

March 5, 2014, 10:45 am

INVESTIGATIVE journalists like the members of ICIJ are facing growing concerns about security. Our members often work with leaks or other materials requiring protection of sources, collaborate across borders with colleagues at risk for their physical safety, and communicate with devices and services open to surveillance or attack.

Photo from Shutterstock

 

And that’s not to mention the growing revelations of surveillance and hacking by the U.S. National Security Agency and its allies – such as efforts to infiltrate and destroy the reputations of “hacktivists” and other targets unrelated to counterterrorism.

For journalists, the ease and low cost of communicating and sharing via e-mail, instant messaging, file sharing tools and cell phones have weighed in favor of convenience versus security. But if your reporting puts you at risk, and you need to protect your data, your sources and your stories, you can take steps to gain security savvy and reduce vulnerability.

Last week at a conference in Baltimore that broke attendance records for the National Institute for Computer Assisted Reporting (NICAR), questions about digital security sent me to sessions on surveillance, safety, privacy and anonymity and between-session conversations on security threats and solutions.

Speakers at NICAR included Jonathan Stray and Susan McGregor (Columbia Journalism School), Jennifer Valentino-DeVries (Wall Street Journal), Josh Meyer (Medill National Security Journalism Initiative) Chris Doten (National Democratic Institute), Kelley Misata (Tor Project) and Gary Price (infoDocket.com).

Here are some of the basics I learned from the experts at NICAR.

  • Protect your identity and data with better and safer passwords or 2-step verification – you log in with password and then confirm with a verification number sent to your phone.
  • Phishing – tricking a user to visit a site to enter personal information and passwords or download malware – is the most common attack. So check any link you receive in e-mail: read the URL and underlying html, don’t click on it!
  • Spear phishing – Personalized message targeting attempted by researching your information or impersonating your friends or colleagues – is growing. You may think you know the sender but it can be a hoax.
  • The weakest link: everyone in your newsroom or collaboration must use safe practices to prevent phishing attacks on others in a trusted group.
  • Encrypt everything. Make it a habit. If you use encryption all the time for communications and data, and encourage or demand it from colleagues and sources, then content will be protected and encryption can become normal behavior for journalists and the industry.
  • PGP is encryption for e-mail. OTR is Off The Record encryption for messaging, which is used by chat programs like Pidgin (PC), Adium (Mac) and CryptoCat (web based). Google “off the record” chat is NOT Off The Record (OTR).
  • Encryption is not anonymity. Encryption protects content but not the identity of the sender and recipient. To anonymize communication traffic and web browsing, go to the Tor Project, learn about the Tor network and download Tor software.
  • Having the Tor software on your computer indicates you are using anonymous communications. If this puts you at risk, you can instead use Tails – Tor on a USB stick, which leaves no trace. Find out at https://www.torproject.org.
  • Protect your data on physical devices. What if your laptop is stolen? Your USB drive? Your cell phone? What about your address book? Encrypt everything. Secure your passwords.
  • Your cell phone is a location device. It holds all your contacts. Think about security. Know where your data is and take steps to protect it.

If you want to learn more about enhancing your security online, you can get Jonathan Stray’s complete presentation “Threat modeling: Security for your story” with audio here. The Journalist Security Guide from the Committee to Protect Journalists also offers useful tips on protecting your online activities in its section on information security.