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'Journalists are most unlikely to be sympathetic to being regulated' (Photo: UNMIK)

Thoughts on the Hungarian media law

No area is more difficult or more sensitive than regulating the media. Attempts to do so instantly run up against a vociferous outcry which tries to present the attempted regulation as an attack on media freedom.

This is hardly surprising. Journalists are most unlikely to be sympathetic to being regulated. Besides, this is classically an area where freedom and license are muddled, where there is supposed to be absolute freedom, and attempts by governments to provide a framework for the...

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The views expressed in this opinion piece are the author’s, not those of EUobserver

Author Bio

Andrew Rettman is EUobserver's Foreign Affairs Editor. He has been writing about foreign and security affairs for EUobserver since 2005. He is Polish but grew up in the UK. He has also written for The Guardian, The Telegraph, and The Times of London.

'Journalists are most unlikely to be sympathetic to being regulated' (Photo: UNMIK)

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Author Bio

Andrew Rettman is EUobserver's Foreign Affairs Editor. He has been writing about foreign and security affairs for EUobserver since 2005. He is Polish but grew up in the UK. He has also written for The Guardian, The Telegraph, and The Times of London.

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