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The European Union spent €2.4bn last year on “biased information campaigns” to “promote itself and its central aim of ‘ever closer union’,” alleges a new study by Open Europe, a UK-based think tank. But the report’s findings were denied by the European Commission, which said it “makes no apologies” for supporting schemes such as the Erasmus student exchange programme.

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“By promoting its policies, actions and principles, the EU serves to justify its own existence and […] cement the European Commission’s view that continued European integration is the best, or even the only, future path for progress,” according to the report.

Presenting the study, entitled ‘The hard sell: EU communication policy and the campaign for hearts and minds’, at the Brussels offices of Libertas, a European political party, on 27 January, Open Europe Director Lorraine Mullally said “much of what the Commission does is laudable, but is very specifically aimed at promoting EU integration”.

Examples cited in the report include funding the production and distribution of literature throughout the continent via a “sophisticated network of information outlets,” and the “tens of millions” of Commission funding set aside for outside organisations, such as NGOs and think tanks, which promote EU objectives.

Commission questions report’s findings

Joe Hennon, spokesperson for EU Communications Commissioner Margot Wallström, questioned the amount cited in the study, saying that his department’s budget “is €100m a year”. “Half of the Open Europe figure is reserved for education and culture, so I presume that Open Europe doesn’t think the EU should be spending money on this,” Hennon opined.

The study indeed argues that Commission funding allocated under its education and culture programmes, including for initiatives such as the Erasmus student mobility scheme and town-twinning, aim to “buy loyalty” by “promoting European citizenship and a common European culture,” in an effort “to engender support for the EU”.

But the EU executive “makes no apologies” for spending money on such programmes, Hennon said, because national governments have been asking it to do so since the Treaty of Rome.

Funding outside organisations ’skews the debate’

“The EU’s propaganda – and in particular the outsourced propaganda that results from the EU funding outside think tanks and NGOs which share its vision – matters because it artificially skews the debate on the EU” in favour of Commission-funded, pro-EU bodies argues the report.

Hennon admitted that the EU funding tended to support organisations supportive of EU integration over others. But this is because “we fund NGOs through calls for tender, and it is usually the pro-EU ones that respond,” he said.

“I also want to get out of this cosy club,” the Commission spokesman insisted, encouraging more Eurosceptic bodies to apply for financial support. Refuting claims that organisations part-financed by the EU executive are biased, Hennon said “we’ve never stopped a Commission-funded NGO from criticising us”.

Commissioner Wallström’s spokesman was not the only one to reject Open Europe’s assessment. “Opposition is there if needed,” insisted Hendrik Kröner, secretary-general of the European Movement, citing EU consumers’ organisation BEUC, part-financed by the EU executive, as an example. “BEUC is not an organisation that always listens to the Commission. I know that from experience,” he said.

‘More controversy required’

The problem with the EU’s communication efforts so far is that there is not enough quality debate to generate interest in European affairs, according to Hans-Martin Tillack, a journalist at Germany’s Stern magazine. “If you want to teach people about Europe, you need controversy. Pure PR doesn’t fill knowledge gaps,” he argued.

The next elections to the European Parliament are set to take place in June, meaning debate around the EU’s role in European politics is likely to intensify in the coming months.

Source: http://www.euractiv.com/en/opinion/eu-communications-derided-biased-propaganda/article-178942

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This week, the new law on extreme porn went live throughout the UK (except Scotland). Hopes in some quarters that this law would prove a panacea to the nastier end of internet kinkiness were dashed last week when ACPO announced that they would not be actively policing it.

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All change, however, as an organisation calling itself extremeporn.org.uk mails The Register to announce that if the government won’t do it, they will. A slightly topsy-turvy argument on its homepage states:

We believe that the law should be enforced; not doing so breeds laziness and impreciseness in the legislature, lack of inspection of the law outside of the legislature, increased power of the executive due to selective enforcement and permits many people guilty – of a crime, if nothing else – to get away Scot-free … This is bad for everyone.

Some more explanation of what it plans to do is contained a little further into the site. They claim that they will primarily categorise and monitor torrents. Once a torrent has been added to their system, they will periodically poll the tracker for peer IPs and then use GeoIP technology to identify UK-based IPs. Where a match is found, the system will, in principle, email the abuse contact for that IP. (This is where extremeporn’s claims become a little vague: they seem to be agreeing, however, that there are practical issues with this stage of the process.)

They claim already to have filed more abuse reports than the Government planned to prosecute in an entire year.

…See Extreme porn vigilantes are after you from theregister.co.uk by John Ozimek

Original legislation: Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008

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Hong Kong film makers are preparing to leave filmgoers goggle-eyed by releasing the world’s first pornographic movie in 3D, a news report said on Sunday.

Shooting on the Chinese-language film 3D Sex And Zen, budgeted at 4 million US dollars, is scheduled for April with producers promising some of the most realistic close-up sex scenes ever.

“Just imagine that you’ll be watching it as if you were sitting beside the bed,” Stephen Shiu Jnr told the Sunday Morning Post.

“There will be many close-ups. It will look as if the actresses are only a few centimetres from the audience.”

Twenty five to 30 per cent of the movie, an update of one of Hong Kong’s best known erotic films Sex And Zen, will be sex scenes, Shiu told the newspaper.

A Hong Kong-based special effects company that has worked on major blockbusters including The Nightmare Before Christmas 3D will help produce the 3D images for the sex movie.

The producers hope the movie will cash in on the craze for 3D films in Hong Kong where 55 per cent of takings for last year’s hit film Journey to the Centre of the Earth came from the 3D version.

However Shiu admitted casting for the film was proving difficult.

“We’re having trouble finding a male lead who is willing to undress in front of the camera,” he told the Post.

“It’s a lot more difficult to find an actor than an actress for this kind of film,” he said.

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