Punk rock and studying the Church Fathers are two radically different pursuits, but Fr. Igor has gone from one to the other as part of the same search.
“I’ve always been attracted to being with people, enjoying their freedom and spontaneity. That’s why my buddies and I started playing in a punk rock band, because that’s what this music is. Playing guitar or drums, we were musically searching for something new, something that would inspire us, nourish us, but also simply satisfy us,” recalls Fr. Igor Seliščev, a Dominican currently living in the city of Khmelnytskyi, in Western Ukraine.
The road to faith
Looking at the friar in the white habit, it’s hard to connect him with the young boy with long hair who used to meet with his friends in garages to seek escape from the grim reality of Donetsk, where he grew up, through punk rock.
Listening to him today as he hosts broadcasts on an internet radio station, looking at his photos with young people and the faithful who come to the youngest Dominican monastery in the world, it’s easy to forget that the front line is only a few hundred miles from here. And although the city itself is in Western Ukraine, Russian rockets have fallen here as well.
fot. arch. prywatne o. Igora Seliščeva
Indeed, there’s only a superficial appearance of peace. The war has made its presence felt in Khmelnytsky. Dominicans and residents are taking in refugees from other parts of the country. Some students from Fr. Igor’s pastoral ministry have already been drafted. The rest are waiting in suspense for their turn. Fr. Igor is with them and helps them face difficult questions as they walk the road towards faith that he himself walked a few years ago.
Punk rock and the search for truth
Igor was raised in a religiously indifferent family. He abandoned his studies at the polytechnic institute after just two years because, as he notes, “It wasn’t my thing. I went there because everyone else was going, but that’s not enough motivation.” The passion he followed afterwards was linguistics, and he eventually graduated with honors.
In addition to punk rock and linguistics, Fr. Igor is constantly searching for the truth. “I was always passionate about the world. I wanted to learn about it and I wanted to find my place in this world; I wanted to discover the truth,” he says. This search led him to conversion and baptism.
fot. arch. prywatne o. Igora Seliščeva
“Like any neophyte I was very zealous at the beginning. I would call this zeal of mine apostolic radicalism. I quickly felt that the Lord was calling me to a religious order, because it is such a radical form of life, and I found apostolic radicalism in the Dominicans.” While it wasn’t love at first sight, he soon found that he simply felt comfortable with the Dominicans, that they were creative and free people.
This search for freedom and creativity, however, took Fr. Igor even further, to the Christian writers of the early centuries of the Church:
During my conversion, I heard and read a lot about the Church Fathers, about returning to the sources, about the origins of Christianity. It’s amazing that often these fathers came from a pagan environment, that they became Christians freely, and although they are similar to each other, each of them retained individuality and distinctiveness. This is very close to me.
fot. arch. prywatne o. Igora Seliščeva
Exploration without fear
Today, Fr. Igor wants to lead the people he lives and works with in Ukraine to the same sources. “The idea is not to focus on the here and now, but to see where the source of our faith is. This, unfortunately, is not much talked about in Ukraine.” Hence Fr. Igor’s idea to reach people in an even better way with the truth about God, who wants to work in people’s lives, through patristic studies.
Together with his confrere from the novitiate, Fr. Andrew Monka, he’s going to study in Rome. Andrew will study Scripture; Igor, the Fathers of the Church. Between the two of them they’re going to study both the Bible and Tradition, the two wings of revelation.
“In Christianity, I see first and foremost a spontaneous search for the truth, which is Jesus. It’s a search without fear of making a mistake. After all, I can always come back, the way is always open. All my life I have been going this way, and I’m convinced that I will continue to do so,” says Fr. Igor.
Punk rock and studying the Church Fathers are two radically different pursuits, but Fr. Igor has gone from one to the other as part of the same search.
“I’ve always been attracted to being with people, enjoying their freedom and spontaneity. That’s why my buddies and I started playing in a punk rock band, because that’s what this music is. Playing guitar or drums, we were musically searching for something new, something that would inspire us, nourish us, but also simply satisfy us,” recalls Fr. Igor Seliščev, a Dominican currently living in the city of Khmelnytskyi, in Western Ukraine.
The road to faith
Looking at the friar in the white habit, it’s hard to connect him with the young boy with long hair who used to meet with his friends in garages to seek escape from the grim reality of Donetsk, where he grew up, through punk rock.
Listening to him today as he hosts broadcasts on an internet radio station, looking at his photos with young people and the faithful who come to the youngest Dominican monastery in the world, it’s easy to forget that the front line is only a few hundred miles from here. And although the city itself is in Western Ukraine, Russian rockets have fallen here as well.
fot. arch. prywatne o. Igora Seliščeva
Indeed, there’s only a superficial appearance of peace. The war has made its presence felt in Khmelnytsky. Dominicans and residents are taking in refugees from other parts of the country. Some students from Fr. Igor’s pastoral ministry have already been drafted. The rest are waiting in suspense for their turn. Fr. Igor is with them and helps them face difficult questions as they walk the road towards faith that he himself walked a few years ago.
Punk rock and the search for truth
Igor was raised in a religiously indifferent family. He abandoned his studies at the polytechnic institute after just two years because, as he notes, “It wasn’t my thing. I went there because everyone else was going, but that’s not enough motivation.” The passion he followed afterwards was linguistics, and he eventually graduated with honors.
In addition to punk rock and linguistics, Fr. Igor is constantly searching for the truth. “I was always passionate about the world. I wanted to learn about it and I wanted to find my place in this world; I wanted to discover the truth,” he says. This search led him to conversion and baptism.
fot. arch. prywatne o. Igora Seliščeva
“Like any neophyte I was very zealous at the beginning. I would call this zeal of mine apostolic radicalism. I quickly felt that the Lord was calling me to a religious order, because it is such a radical form of life, and I found apostolic radicalism in the Dominicans.” While it wasn’t love at first sight, he soon found that he simply felt comfortable with the Dominicans, that they were creative and free people.
This search for freedom and creativity, however, took Fr. Igor even further, to the Christian writers of the early centuries of the Church:
During my conversion, I heard and read a lot about the Church Fathers, about returning to the sources, about the origins of Christianity. It’s amazing that often these fathers came from a pagan environment, that they became Christians freely, and although they are similar to each other, each of them retained individuality and distinctiveness. This is very close to me.
fot. arch. prywatne o. Igora Seliščeva
Exploration without fear
Today, Fr. Igor wants to lead the people he lives and works with in Ukraine to the same sources. “The idea is not to focus on the here and now, but to see where the source of our faith is. This, unfortunately, is not much talked about in Ukraine.” Hence Fr. Igor’s idea to reach people in an even better way with the truth about God, who wants to work in people’s lives, through patristic studies.
Together with his confrere from the novitiate, Fr. Andrew Monka, he’s going to study in Rome. Andrew will study Scripture; Igor, the Fathers of the Church. Between the two of them they’re going to study both the Bible and Tradition, the two wings of revelation.
“In Christianity, I see first and foremost a spontaneous search for the truth, which is Jesus. It’s a search without fear of making a mistake. After all, I can always come back, the way is always open. All my life I have been going this way, and I’m convinced that I will continue to do so,” says Fr. Igor.
ou don’t have to be a die-hard fan to know that in Barbie’s world, pink is the colour of the day every day.
The shade is inextricably tied to the world’s most famous doll, directing everything from her wardrobe to the colour of the walls in her Dreamhouse. But it doesn’t stop there, oh no: her appliances get a candy-coloured makeover too.
With love for all things Barbie approaching fever pitch ahead of Greta Gerwig’s live action film release on July 21, more of us are taking a leaf out of Barbie’s rosy playbook and thinking pink.
While living in the Dreamhouse is the stuff of fantasies, there are ways to inject the aesthetic into your own home. Many pieces on the movie set were made specifically for the film, but eagle-eyed viewers will notice that some household names are in the mix too.
For instance, in the video below, a candy pink Smeg toaster can be spotted on the kitchen worktop, ready for making Barbie’s breakfast toast when she fancies it.
If you want to join in by choosing to replace tired appliances with a fun pink version, the options are looking decidedly rosy.
From Smeg kitchen appliances to high-tech TVs and digital DAB radios, there’s a huge swathe of electricals that come with a dopamine-spiking helping of fun.
We’ve rounded up the best of them into an edit below, making them easier to shop.
Scroll on to see the best Dreamhouse-themed home appliances
HP Stream 11-ak0517sa 11-inch Laptop
HP
With more than 200 careers on her CV, Barbie has always been grafter. Emulate her doll boss vibe with HP’s rather chic laptop, offered in a blush pink. An easy way to bring some joy into your WFH day, you can zip through your work load and use the built-in webcam and mic to catch up with friends and family afterwork too. It comes with a year’s free Office 365 Personal too, so you can hit the ground running.
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KitchenAid Artisan 175 Stand Mixer Dried Rose 5KSM175PSBDR
KitchenAid
The ultimate baking companion, KitchenAid’s stand mixer comes in a rainbow of colours, including this sweet dried rose shade. The timeless, chic design is durable and it comes with different attachments for all your cooking and baking needs – including a patented ‘planetary’ mixing action that will save your arms from whisk-ache.
There are 10 speeds to use and it comes with two sizes of stainless steel bowl, good for small bakes as well as large. Comes with a five year manufacturer’s guarantee.
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Tassimo Vivy 2 Pink – Coffee Machine
Tassimo
Make your brew an altogether happier one with Tassimo’s coffee machine, which comes in a pink as hot as the coffee it’ll make for you. Heat up time is fast and the one-button operation means it’s blissfully simple to use. The small-size machine uses Tassimo pods to make any drink you fancy, not just coffee, making it a multi-use appliance you’ll reach for time and time again.
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Roberts Revival iStream 3L
Roberts
A retro design with contemporary functions, this Roberts radio is the perfect gadget to keep you company around the house. The vintage 50s-look body is armed to the teeth with the latest tech, including a smart radio that can broadcast web radio as well as DAB+ and FM stations. It can transform into a Bluetooth speaker and play her favourite tracks from Spotify and Deezer, all with crystal clear audio.
Available in a range of bright and muted shades to best suit your style.
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Smeg 50’s Retro TSF02PKUK 4 Slice Toaster – Pink
Smeg
Want the same appliances that star in Barbie: The Movie? Head to AO to find the same Smeg toaster Margot Robbie has in her Dreamhouse kitchen. The four-slice design can toast regular slices as well as bagels and there’s even a reheat option to warm slices you may have forgotten about in the chaos of getting ready for the day. It’s fitted with a removeable tray to help you get rid of wayward crumbs easily.
For those who fancy a step-change to pink, baby blue is a wonderful alternative. Add a pop of colour to your kitchen with Smeg’s retro-style fridge, which boasts a left-hand hinge – welcome news for lefties.
The large 294L capacity fridge can hold the equivalent of 18 bags of shopping with three shelves to arrange your groceries across. The only downside is that it doesn’t come with an auto defrost feature – but you’ve got Ken for that.
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Dyson Supersonic™ hair dryer Iron/Fuchsia
Dyson
If you’re non-committal about sticking solely to your natural curls and would rather invest in an all-rounder kind of hairdryer, there’s probably no better investment than a Dyson Supersonic. With five styling attachments (diffuser included, of course) this model will allow you to embrace your hair’s versatility.
The diffuser included with this hairdryer has those ever-useful extra-large 3D prongs so you can style more hair in one go with control. Speedy, speedy, speedy styling. Yes, please.
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Oral-B iO6 Pink Sand Ultimate Clean Electric Toothbrush
Oral-B
That gleaming white smile doesn’t happen on its own. Make like Barbie and invest in an electric toothbrush to bring out the best in your pearly whites. Oral-B’s are some of the best around offering a dentist-grade clean to start and end your day with. There are five modes to pick from and AI helps to guide you all around your mouth, so you’ll never miss a spot. Best of all? It comes in a Barbie-ready shade of pink.
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BaByliss 2200 Hair Dryer, Rose Blush
BaByliss
A great mid-price option, BaByliss delivers the goods with this rose pink hair dryer. It’ll not only look good on your dressing table; this 2200W baby promises salon-like results every hair wash day. It dries sections at high speed thanks to Advanced Airflow technology and comes with ionic tech for frizz-free results.
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Ninja Foodi MAX 14-in-1 SmartLid Multi-Cooker 7.5L OL650UKDBCP
Ninja
Rose gold is pink’s older, glamorous cousin, making it a perfectly fitting choice for homeowners and renters who want to bring grown-up Barbiecore to the kitchen. This multicooker will render the rest of your kitchen appliances practically obselete: it can pressure cook, air fry, steam, slow cook, bake and grill, plus do plenty of other clever tricks under the hood.
It cooks up to 70 per cent faster than the usual methods, which means lower bills and faster dinners.
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Sky Glass TV
Sky
The smallest available Sky Glass is a 43-incher, and if you’re not familiar with Sky TV’s latest attempt to stay at the centre of your living room in these days of fast broadband and easy streaming, then just know that it handles your Sky channels as well as other apps. It is available as an additional monthly subscription on your existing Sky bill and comes in a pleasing shade of pink.
It replaces a standard Sky satellite box by holding the tech inside the TV, and is entirely reliant on your internet connection – so make sure that it’s fast. For your money, you’ll get all the Sky channels on-demand, plus a host of other streaming services. The 4K Quantum Dot display supports HDR10 and Dolby Vision, but you won’t get a 120Hz refresh rate through the HDMIs, of which there are three.
If you like what Sky’s offering, and don’t mind the monthly subscription, then this is a good choice. You literally need nothing else but a decent internet connection.
£699 outright, or monthly subscription contract.
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Dunelm Retro Digital 20L 800W Microwave, Pink
Dunelm
From making popcorn to heating up a ready meal, a microwave is a kitchen essential. Dunelm’s 20L version comes in the shade of the summer and is ready to go with five power settings and a defrost setting too. There’s also a child lock for safety.
Commissioner of Police (ag), Clifton Hicken and other senior ranks of the Police Force
By Editor
As part of efforts to improve its relationship between the public and its ranks, the Guyana Police Force is working to establish a studio to boost its public relations (PR) drive, Commissioner of Police (ag) Clifton Hicken said on Thursday.
The facility, according to Hicken, will be used to produce radio programmes to highlight the work of the various sectors within the Force.
Hicken made the disclosure as he was addressing the GPF’s 184th-anniversary awards ceremony at Eve Leary, Georgetown.
“We want to want to be data-driven.
“If we are to transition from a Guyana Police Force to a Guyana Police Service, we will have to be data-driven…and so it is very important to us as we contemplate these initiatives to improve our efficiency and to ensure that we bridge the gap between members of the public and police,” Hicken told the gathering.
As we’re walking out to the 1996 Eurocopter AS350 B2 perched on the pad outside Garmin AT’s offices in Salem, Oregon, I naturally head for the right seat. Because to my fixed-wing pilot brain, that’s where the observer sits, the copilot. And as one with only a handful of hours in rotorcraft in total, that’s what I guess I had expected to do on this demo flight—my introduction to Garmin’s GFC 600H for the AStar.
So when Garmin flight test engineer—and experienced rotorcraft instructor—Jack Loflin gestures me into the right seat, I don’t hesitate. Then I do.
He’s putting me on. Is this wise?
But as it turns out, I’m not only ready for my first AS350 lesson, I am going to have the best assistant I could possibly have. The GFC 600H turned me—for a couple of amazing hours—into a helicopter pilot.
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I’m not saying this is its intended application—or even a good one—but it’s an indication of just how incredible the advances in autoflight have come to the rotorcraft world, that I can even fathom what I’mabout to see and do in the AStar.
Takeoff—And a Cross-Country
The AS350 is also equipped with the Garmin G500 TXi flight display system for rotorcraft, along with the GTN 750 Xi and GTN 650 Xi, allowing for a host of other features—including H-TWAS—to supplementour short cross-country flight. Loflin has planned for us to fly from the Salem Municipal Airport (KSLE) up to the Portland Downtown Heliport (61J)—a gem in that it is one of the few public heliports located in a major metro area in the U.S. We’ll utilize it—it sits on the top of a multistory public parking lot—to pop in for lunch at Loflin’s favorite Lebanese place downtown.
From there, we’ll take off and head back southwest towards the Willamette Valley, dropping in to practice hovering and other spot landings both on-airport and off, on a sandbar in the Willamette River.
Our demo cross-country flight in the AStar takes us to Portland and then over the Willamette Valley. [Credit: Stephen Yeates]
From the briefing, I know what to expect of the GFC 600H—now it’s time for Loflin to give me dual on our departure after leading me through the engine start and initial rotation from the pad outside Garmin AT’s flight ops hangar.
Garmin sales manager Pat Coleman has joined us—on our way out to the helicopter, he showed us a few projects inside the Garmin skunkworks in the hangar. Originally certificated in the AS350 in 2019, additions to the GFC 600H’s supplemental type certificate approved model list (STC AML) loom ahead. You can already find the autoflight system in the Bell 505 under a Garmin-owned STC, which came out in mid-2021.
As we lift off and Loflin hands the controls over to me, I feel a sense of low-level anxiety, reflecting on my minimal time in the category. But that quickly melts away as I test out the three axes of flight in small increments as I follow the magenta line that leads us up to Portland proper.
Along our initial flight path, I feel only the barest sense that the autoflight system’s silent hand carries me in the background. It monitors the envelope, speeds, and other parameters to stabilize my relatively level flight. I come down to 500 feet msl to track into the city; we’re indicating about 95 knots.
Garmin produces several product lines through capabilities in the Salem, Oregon, facility, for added bench depth. [Credit: Stephen Yeates]
We are approaching from the south-southeast—the city lies along the Willamette, making for a pleasingly situated downtown, with the heliport we’re aiming for on the western bank. Loflin points out several key obstacles as we approach—at this altitude, nearly everything becomes an obstruction, but the TXi highlights only the most critical at the moment on the multifunction display. The screen shows normal terrain shading with a yellow “obstacle” annunciation as we come up on a series of bridges.
The same obstruction shows on the Garmin GI 275 electronic flight instrument located in the center stack. It has many of the same functions available as those brethren STCed for airplanes—a PFD with attitude, airspeed, altitude, and vertical speed, plus MFD, traffic, terrain, and engine information.
A web of red lines depicts the location of powerlines and other high wires that threaten a helicopter’s path. In order to get the most out of the aircraft’s capabilities, you need to take it into confined areas that would be fatal to fixed wings. It’s a whole different way of looking at the world—and the obstruction data on the MFD goes from towers popping up during an otherwise uneventful flight to an entire maze to navigate down low.
The interference testing lab mimics those in Garmin’s primary facility in Olathe, Kansas. [Credit: Stephen Yeates]
Loflin coaches me so that I take us within about a quarter mile and 100 feet of the landing pad, then takes over to position the AS350 into the relatively confined space. I say “relatively” because there’s plenty of room on the heliport to accommodate at least three helicopters, maybe four, depending on how well they are parked.
He slows us to 35 kias on short approach, bleeding down to hover over the space we’ll leave the AS350 parked in while we grab lunch. It feels surreal—yet just like another one of those “only with GA moments” as the four of us take the elevator down to the street and walk out onto the rather quiet city streets.
Though the pilot’s hand remains on the cyclic control stick, the GFC 600H is working silently in the background. [Credit: Stephen Yeates]
Hover Test
We remember the code to get back to the fifth floor of the parking garage—the heliport restricts access to pilots and their guests or customers for clear reasons. It’s time to fire up again and head out to play—and really test the GFC 600H’s mettle against the best amateur rotorcraft pilot moves I can throw at it.
We follow the river out of town, over connecting lakes, and into the valley which is world-renowned for its pinot noir and chardonnay. It’s the very best view of the vines as we pass over them at a neighborly altitude. Often helicopters a reused for frost protection and other agricultural ops over the vineyards—but that is not our mission today.
Our first stop has us joining the traffic pattern at the McMinnville Municipal Airport (KMMV). To me, the airport is famous because it’s home to the Evergreen Aviation Museum—and home to the famous Spruce Goose, the Hughes Hercules eight-engined mammoth that sits barely encased in glass so its enormity can be appreciated even if you never step foot in the museum. We don’t make a stop there today—but both the Gooseand the Boeing 747 in Evergreen livery out front create easy landmarks for me to follow in the pattern.
After the approach, Loflin instructs me through slowing the AS350 down into a hover over a far reach of the taxiway. We have plenty of ramp space here to give me the leeway I need to perform my first AS350 hovering—at first highly assisted by the GFC 600H, in both attitude and yaw hold modes. Then, Loflin turns the magic off. And all of a sudden, the work that the autopilot has been performing behind the scenes becomes dramatically apparent. He takes back the controls periodically to help me along.
We step taxi over to a field northwest of the runway, an open area where we can play a little more. I get to test with and without the GFC 600H and see again just how much it is assisting me as a newb. Now, the benefit to the seasoned pilot lies in the dramatically reduced workload—just like any autopilot—taking the physical work of flying the aircraft from the pilot’s hands so they can focus on something else. And if you think about it, that’s a big change for a helicopter pilot who nearly always has to have both hands engaged with the flight controls during a flight,with only momentary transitions to change radio frequencies or manage checklists.
In the research and development hangar, several projects continue to push forward as Garmin expands autoflight. [Credit: Stephen Yeates]
ESP, Rotor Style
The envelope stability protection that we enjoy in the fixed-wing versions of Garmin’s autoflight systems takes on a new cast in the GFC 600H. H-ESP, as it’s called here, provides both low speed and overspeed protection, as well as limit cueing to help the pilot keep the helicopter upright.
When the pilot maintains f light with the rotor blade plane tilted less than 10 degrees from level, the ESP system sits in the background, monitoring the flight dynamics. When it first senses the rotor plane approaching the beginning of the limit arc either up or down, ESP engages and applies the nudge that’s familiar to those of us accustomed to flying with ESP in other aircraft. If the pilot powers through that nudge and continues to tilt the rotor plane towards the upper limit of the arc, the GFC 600H applies up to a maximum level of force, opposing the pilot’s action and striving to return the rotor plane to a level state.
In the case of a low speed limit approaching, the yellow “LOWSPD” annunciation appears on the pilot’s primary flight display. Similarly, if a maximum speed limit is anticipated, the yellow “MAXSPD” highlights. A LVL mode returns the helicopter to a zero fpm vertical and zero bank angle lateral attitude when actuated.
Flying the Approach
Coming back into Salem, we opt for another one of the system’s enormous safety benefits—the ability to fly a coupled approach. The AS350 we’re in is placarded “VFR Only,” and many helicopter pilots do not possess an instrument rating. It’s not that they wouldn’t ever need the skill, but it comes up less often than it does for airplane pilots.
That is, until it takes on critical importance. Recalling the accident that took Kobe Bryant’s life and those of his family and friends in January 2020, it’s sobering to contemplate what would have been different if the pilot had been able to maintain situational awareness.
The GFC 600H, when integrated with the NXi, allows even a non-rated pilot to engage an approach as a safety tool in lowering visibility. We had set up the RNAV (GPS) approach to Runway 31 at KSLE and I engaged the AP through a similar mode controller as other Garmin autoflight systems in the series. Though I cannot tell you how many times I’ve watched the approach proceedings unfold on an MFD over the course of my career, it’s wild to see it happen in a helicopter. Our speed on the approach isn’t too slow—though it’s slower than what most of us are accustomed to—but the outcome is the same. We’ve returned to a safe position from which to hover-taxi to our final landing point on the airport.
That’s when it really hits me—the GFC 600H makes the helicopter as easy to keep in level flight or a stabilized approach as an airplane. I mean, Coleman had said it in our initial conversations, but it turns out not to be just a marketing line. The autopilot shadowing me allowed me to manipulate the controls in a way more akin to my ingrained skill controlling an airplane. I’ve thoroughly enjoyed my rotorcraft lessons before, but flying a helicopter without this felt like pirouetting on the head of a pin—a delicate balancing act full of nuance and retraining my muscle memory.
While this isn’t a panacea—what happens to the pilot who flies with it on all the time when it breaks, and they suddenly have to hand-fly? But that’s a question we ask in the fixed-wing world too—and we make sure to train both VFR and IFR flight without the automation as a result, to keep those skills sharp.
The other piece is that it made the rotorcraft rating feel approachable—and one less barrier to entry, perhaps. But most of all, the real capability of the GFC 600H changes the game for safety.
This article was originally published in the March 2023 Issue 935 of FLYING
Genesys Autoflight for Helicopters
Genesys helicopter’s speed range, with altitude-command and altitude-hold functions. Fly-through system engagement is available in all flight regimes, from startup to shutdown, and the system features rugged, redundant flight control computers. Total weight installed is less than 35 pounds, and it operates in a fail-operable manner. The GRC 3000 is currently certificated on the Airbus EC-145e and the Sikorsky UH-60 Black Hawk.
Aerosystems (formerly S-TEC) entered the autoflight arena in 2014 with its HeliSAS two-axis VFR autopilot and stability augmentation system for light rotorcraft on the AS350 as well as the EC 130, followed by the Bell 206B/L and 407, and the Robinson R44 and R66. A three-axis option is available for the Bell 505. The company has delivered more than 1,000 units to date.
The HeliSAS incorporates the ability to track heading and nav functions (VOR, LOC, GPS), with course intercept capability, and manage forward speed, vertical speed, and altitude.
With units weighing less than 15 pounds, the HeliSAS also features an auto-recovery mode to return the helicopter to a neutral attitude when the pilot loses situational awareness. And according to the company, its system has also allowed pilots with no prior rotorcraft experience to maintain the helicopter in a hover “with very little practice.”
Genesys also makes an IFR autoflight system, the GRC 3000. The two- or three-axis autopilot includes auto-recovery to near-level flight attitude throughout the
This sidebar was originally published in the March 2023 Issue 935 of FLYING.
‘Facebook has decided to be unreasonable, irresponsible, and started blocking news’
Published Jul 05, 2023 • Last updated 3 hours ago • 3 minute read
Federal Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez at the Canadian Media Producers Association Prime Time conference in Ottawa, Feb. 2, 2023.Photo by Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press
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OTTAWA – The federal and Quebec governments will stop advertising on Meta-owned platforms Facebook and Instagram as the conflict between the company and Ottawa heats up over legislation that would force web giants to share revenues with news publishers.
“Facebook has decided to be unreasonable, irresponsible, and started blocking news,” Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez told reporters Wednesday flanked by Bloc Québécois MP Martin Champoux and NDP MP Peter Julian.
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Shortly after, Quebec Premier François Legault announced his government would follow suite and stop advertising on Facebook “in solidarity with the media”. “No company is above the law,” he added on Twitter.
But the Liberal government’s decision does not extend to the party. Liberal Party of Canada spokesperson Parker Lund said in a statement that the party would continue to advertise on Meta-owned platforms. According to the company’s ad library, the party spent nearly $15,000 on over 1,000 ads in the past month.
Rodriguez said his government was only targeting ads on Meta platforms and not those on Google because the former has refused to negotiate a deal to compensate news media companies for the use of their content.
“I consider that Google’s approach is responsible. They have specific requests and that’s normal, they’re a private company,” Rodriguez said.
“Meta, on the other side, is not talking to us,” he added. “They took a different approach and I don’t think it’s it’s good for anyone; not for them, not for the government, not for Canadians.”
Trudeau accuses Meta of abandoning democratic ‘responsibility’ for walking away from Online News Act
Government has ‘options’ if Facebook, Google pull news content, minister says
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The Online News Act, formerly known as Bill C-18, received royal assent on June 22. It would obligate Meta and Google to reach commercial deals with news publishers to share revenues for news stories that appear on their platforms (Postmedia, publisher of the National Post, is in favour of the legislation) once it comes into force within six months.
In response to the bill’s passing, Meta began blocking news content on its Facebook and Instagram platforms to certain users in recent weeks.
Google has said it will remove Canadian news links from its products when the act comes into force in around six months, but Rodriguez said he is optimistic that it won’t come to that.
“We’ve met both Google and Meta multiple times to better understand the concerns. We believe we have a path forward and we’re willing to continue talking with the platforms,” Rodriguez said. “We’re convinced what Google is asking at this moment can be done through regulations.”
According to its latest annual report on advertisement spending, the federal government spent over $23 million on ads on Facebook and Instagram between 2020 and 2022, nearly triple what it spent on Twitter ($6.7 million) or Snapchat ($5 million).
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On Wednesday, Quebec’s largest media conglomerate Quebecor, which owns newspapers Le Journal de Montréal and Le Journal de Québec as well as TVA news stations, announced it was pulling advertising from Meta platforms as long as the company refused to host Canadian news links.
“In view of Meta’s categorical refusal to enter into negotiations, Quebecor announces that, effective immediately and until further notice, it is withdrawing all advertising by its subsidiaries and business units from Facebook and Instagram,” the company said in an unattributed statement.
Cogeco, a Quebec-based radio operator, quickly followed suit.
Spokespeople for other media companies including Torstar, The Globe and Mail, Bell Media, Corus, Postmedia (which owns the National Post) and La Presse did not respond to questions about their advertising on Google and Meta platforms by deadline.
A spokesperson for CBC/Radio-Canada Leon Mar said only that the Crown corporation is “monitoring this situation and considering the options.”
On Wednesday, CBC News Editor Brodie Fenlon wrote on his blog that he was among the users who had lost access to the CBC Instagram account as part of Meta’s news blocking. Instead of news, he said, he was greeted with the message: “People in Canada can’t see this content. In response to Canadian government legislation, news content can’t be viewed in Canada.”
The NDP confirmed Wednesday it would continue to buy ads on Facebook and Instagram, whereas the Bloc Québécois said it had cut its advertisements on Meta platforms at the end of June.
The Parliamentary Budget Officer has estimated that under the Online News Act, Google and Meta could end up funding more than 30 per cent of newsroom costs, just under $330 million a year. But if Google and Meta remove news from their platforms, they will no longer be covered under the Online News Act.
With additional reporting by Anja Karadeglija
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In May 2006, Stockholm was the unlikely front line in the fight for the future of the music industry. The city’s police raided Swedish-owned file-sharing site The Pirate Bay and seized its web servers, temporarily shutting down its global business. Across town, a young entrepreneur named Daniel Ek was about to launch Spotify.
It was a turning point, says Mattias Tengblad, a former musician who had just taken over as commercial director at Universal Music in Sweden. “The business was going down the drain. We had politicians defending young people for using The Pirate Bay, and it was felt the industry was finished in its current form,” he says. “But in no time Spotify had a million subscribers. In a few years, it had 2 million Swedish users from a population of 9 million.”
But while Spotify was once the solution, today it is the problem. In July 2022, the UK Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) reported that artists with 1 million Spotify streams a month only earned £12,000 (about $15,000) a year after major label costs were deducted. The modern template gives artists little control over how and when their music is released—but it still demands that they do a lot of the promotional work required to stand out among the 70,000 new releases that hit Spotify every day. Singer Halsey publicly bemoaned her label for blocking her release of new tracks. “I’ve sold over 165 million records. My record company is saying that I can’t release unless I fake a viral moment on TikTok,” she said.
Tengblad—who once toured in a semi-successful band called Kosmic—hopes Sweden might once again have the solution. He is cofounder and CEO of Corite—as in “cowrite”—a platform that allows artists to crowdfund new releases. Fans get a small share in the profits of each track; artists keep creative control and a bigger slice of the pie from sales and streams. Corite takes a 5 percent cut.
“To get signed, you have to get about 1 million streams per month and be big on socials,” says Tengblad. “But by that point, why wouldn’t you see if you can make the cash by yourself? You have the community, platform, and appeal already—that’s where Corite fits in.”
Tengblad cofounded the company in 2019 alongside Emil Angervall, an industry veteran he’d worked closely with for 20 years. Artists who have migrated to Corite from major labels include DJ Alan Walker, one of Spotify’s top 100 most-streamed artists of all time. Walker raised $25,000 through Corite to crowdfund the recent single “Unity,” which was streamed more than 4.1 million times in its first month. The hope is that the track will pull in around £6.3 million over the next five years, says Tengblad, giving early investors a return of between five and 10 times their initial investment.
But making money isn’t necessarily Corite’s main selling point. Fans invest in small chunks: no more than $10 at a time, and no single investor has a portfolio of more than $1,000 at the time of writing. It’s more about engagement. “If you have 3,000 fans who have all invested $10 actively working in your favor, that is huge,” says Tengblad. “If Alan Walker wanted to, he could have let one rich guy fund the whole total, but that would have served no purpose. What is that one guy going to do to promote it?”
If cellphones and other means of communication go down in a large-scale disaster, Lambton County Radio Club volunteers will be ready to go on the air and provide emergency communications for the community.
Published Jun 23, 2023 • 2 minute read
Charles Chivers, president of the Lambton County Radio Club, is shown with an amateur radio in his backyard. The club is holding its annual Field Day Saturday and Sunday in Enniskillen Township’s Krall Park. Photo by Paul Morden /The Observer
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If cellphones and other means of communication go down in a large-scale disaster, Lambton County Radio Club volunteers will be ready to go on the air and provide emergency communications for the community.
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For 24 hours from Saturday to Sunday, club amateur radio operators will gold their annual field day in Enniskillen Township’s Krall Park, demonstrating how they can set up an independent communications network when disaster strikes.
Field days have been a tradition among amateur radio groups since the 1930s, said Charles Chivers, president of the Lambton club.
“It’s practice for when all the power goes out, either a natural disaster or manmade disaster, and nobody can communicate,” he said.
One example is if a tornado strikes and causes widespread damage, including taking down communication towers. Amateur, or ham, radios still can operate in those conditions, allowing operators to pass along messages for officials and residents.
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“Ham radio functions completely independently of the internet or cellphone infrastructure, yet can interface with tablets or smartphones, and can be set up almost anywhere in minutes,” Chivers said. “That’s the beauty of amateur radio during a communications outage.”
About 20 club members are expected to take part in this year’s field day using radios, emergency power and wire antennas strung in the trees.
This year’s event begins Saturday at 2 p.m., in the park at Oil Heritage Road and Shiloh Line, and runs until 2 p.m. Sunday.
Chivers said the aim is to simulate an emergency, when club members could be called on to operate for 24 hours.
“Some stay awake,” he said. “Some catch a few z’s somewhere away from the action.”
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Amateur radio operators have a role to play in provincial and local emergency plans, and also volunteer as storm spotters for Canada’s weather agency, a club release said.
The public is invited to come out and learn about amateur radio and the club, Chivers said. They’ve also invited local politicians to see how the volunteers can respond in an emergency.
“Come out to the park and see what we do,” he said.
The club has used the Enniskillen Township park before for field days, Chivers said. It has room to set up several stations and is in a rural area with little background noise..
Field days are held across North America and more than 45,000 people took part last year, the club said.
The Lambton club has about 50 members.
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“The problem is we’re all older,” Chivers said. “I’m one of the younger fellows and I’m 63. We’re looking to recruit younger people into the club, all the time.”
Folks often come to amateur radio because of an interest in electronics and making things, Chivers said. “Some people just want to help out in disasters and emergencies.”
There are more than 75,000 amateur radio operators in Canada and more than 2.5 million worldwide, the club said.
Chivers traces his own interest to a ham radio demonstration years ago at a Scouts’ gathering.
“That got me intrigued and just planted the seed,” he said.
For mire on the Lambton club, visit their website at ve3sar.org..
pmorden@postmedia.com
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If cellphones and other means of communication go down in a large-scale disaster, Lambton County Radio Club volunteers will be ready to go on the air and provide emergency communications for the community.
Published Jun 23, 2023 • 2 minute read
Charles Chivers, president of the Lambton County Radio Club, is shown with an amateur radio in his backyard. The club is holding its annual Field Day Saturday and Sunday in Enniskillen Township’s Krall Park. Photo by Paul Morden /The Observer
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If cellphones and other means of communication go down in a large-scale disaster, Lambton County Radio Club volunteers will be ready to go on the air and provide emergency communications for the community.
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For 24 hours from Saturday to Sunday, club amateur radio operators will gold their annual field day in Enniskillen Township’s Krall Park, demonstrating how they can set up an independent communications network when disaster strikes.
Field days have been a tradition among amateur radio groups since the 1930s, said Charles Chivers, president of the Lambton club.
“It’s practice for when all the power goes out, either a natural disaster or manmade disaster, and nobody can communicate,” he said.
One example is if a tornado strikes and causes widespread damage, including taking down communication towers. Amateur, or ham, radios still can operate in those conditions, allowing operators to pass along messages for officials and residents.
Article content
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“Ham radio functions completely independently of the internet or cellphone infrastructure, yet can interface with tablets or smartphones, and can be set up almost anywhere in minutes,” Chivers said. “That’s the beauty of amateur radio during a communications outage.”
About 20 club members are expected to take part in this year’s field day using radios, emergency power and wire antennas strung in the trees.
This year’s event begins Saturday at 2 p.m., in the park at Oil Heritage Road and Shiloh Line, and runs until 2 p.m. Sunday.
Chivers said the aim is to simulate an emergency, when club members could be called on to operate for 24 hours.
“Some stay awake,” he said. “Some catch a few z’s somewhere away from the action.”
Advertisement 4
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Article content
Amateur radio operators have a role to play in provincial and local emergency plans, and also volunteer as storm spotters for Canada’s weather agency, a club release said.
The public is invited to come out and learn about amateur radio and the club, Chivers said. They’ve also invited local politicians to see how the volunteers can respond in an emergency.
“Come out to the park and see what we do,” he said.
The club has used the Enniskillen Township park before for field days, Chivers said. It has room to set up several stations and is in a rural area with little background noise..
Field days are held across North America and more than 45,000 people took part last year, the club said.
The Lambton club has about 50 members.
Advertisement 5
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Article content
“The problem is we’re all older,” Chivers said. “I’m one of the younger fellows and I’m 63. We’re looking to recruit younger people into the club, all the time.”
Folks often come to amateur radio because of an interest in electronics and making things, Chivers said. “Some people just want to help out in disasters and emergencies.”
There are more than 75,000 amateur radio operators in Canada and more than 2.5 million worldwide, the club said.
Chivers traces his own interest to a ham radio demonstration years ago at a Scouts’ gathering.
“That got me intrigued and just planted the seed,” he said.
For mire on the Lambton club, visit their website at ve3sar.org..
pmorden@postmedia.com
Article content
Share this article in your social network
Comments
Postmedia is committed to maintaining a lively but civil forum for discussion and encourage all readers to share their views on our articles. Comments may take up to an hour for moderation before appearing on the site. We ask you to keep your comments relevant and respectful. We have enabled email notifications—you will now receive an email if you receive a reply to your comment, there is an update to a comment thread you follow or if a user you follow comments. Visit our Community Guidelines for more information and details on how to adjust your email settings.
Join the Conversation
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External experts are poring over the “inappropriate editing” of international news published online by RNZ. It has already tightened editorial checks and stood down an online journalist. Will this dent trust in RNZ — or news in general? Were campaigns propagating national propaganda a factor? Mediawatch asks two experts with international experience.
MEDIAWATCH:By Colin Peacock, RNZ Mediawatch presenter
The comedians on 7 Days had a few laughs at RNZ’s expense against a backdrop of the Kremlin on TV Three this week.
“A Radio New Zealand digital journalist has been stood down after it emerged they’d been editing news stories on the broadcaster’s website to give them a pro-Russian slant, which is kind of disgusting,” host Jeremy Corbett said.
“You’d never get infiltration like that on 7 Days. Our security is too strong. Strong like a bear. Strong like the glorious Russian state and its leader Putin,” he said.
“I love this Russian strategy: ‘First, we take New Zealand’s fourth best and fourth most popular news site — then the world!” said Melanie Bracewell, who said she had not kept up with the news.
Just a joke, obviously, but this week some people have been asking if Kremlin campaigns played a role in the inappropriate editing of online world news.
It was on June 9 that the revelation of it kicked off a media frenzy about propaganda, misinformation, Russia, Ukraine, truth, trust and editorial standards that has been no laughing matter at RNZ.
The story went up a notch last weekend when TVNZ’s Thomas Mead revealed Ukrainian New Zealander Michael Lidski — along with 20 others — had complained about a story written by the journalist in May 2022, which RNZ had re-edited on the day to add alternative perspectives after prompting from an RNZ journalist who considered it sub-standard.
The next day on RNZ’s Checkpoint, presenter Lisa Owen said the suspended RNZ web journalist had told her he edited reports “in that way for five years” — and nobody had ever queried it or told him to stop.
RNZ chief executive Paul Thompson, who is also editor-in-chief, then told Checkpoint he did not consider what he had called “pro-Kremlin garbage” a resignation-worthy issue.
“I think this is a time for us actually working together to fix the problem,” he said.
RNZ had already begun taking out the trash in public by listing the corrupted (and now corrected) stories on the RNZ.co.nz homepage as they are discovered.
Thompson said the problem was “confined to a small area of what RNZ does” but by the following day, RNZ found six more stories — supplied originally by the reputable news agency Reuters — had also been edited in terms more favourable to the ruling regimes.
“RNZ has come out with a statement that said: ‘In our defence, we didn’t actually realise anyone was reading our stories’,” said 7 Days’ Jeremy Corbett.
That was just a gag — but it did actually explain just how it took so long for the dodgy edits to come to light and become newsworthy.
7 Days’ comedians have a laugh at RNZ against the backdrop of the Kremlin in last Thursday night’s episode. Image: TV Three screenshot RNZ/APR
Where the problem lay Last Wednesday’s cartoon in the Stuff papers — featuring an RNZ radio newsreader with a Pinocchio-length nose didn’t raise any laughs there either — because none of the slanted stories in question ever went out in the news on the air.
They were only to be found online — and this was a significant distinction as it turned out, because the checks and balances are not quite the same or made by the same staff.
“In radio, a reporter writes a story and sends it to a sub-editor who will then check it. And then a news reader has to read it so there’s a couple of stages. Maybe even a chief reporter would have checked it as well,” Corin Dann told RNZ Morning Report listeners last Monday.
“What I’m trying to establish is what sort of checks and balances were there to ensure that that world story was properly vetted,” he said.
That question — and others — will now be asked by the external experts appointed this week to run the rule of RNZ’s online publishing procedures for a review that will be made public.
On Thursday a former RNZer Brent Edwards made a similar point in the National Business Review where he’ is now the political editor.
“For a couple of years, I was the director of news gathering. I had a large responsibility for RNZ’s news coverage but technically I had no responsibility whatsoever for what went on the web,” he said.
“Done properly the RNZ review panel could do all news media a favour by providing a template for how online news should be curated. It should reinforce the importance of quality, ethical journalism,” Edwards added.
His NBR colleague Dita di Boni said “there but for the grace of God go other outlets” which have “gone digital” in news.
“I worked at TVNZ and there was a rush to digital as well with lots of resources going in but little oversight from the main newsroom.”
Calls for political action Prime Minister Chris Hipkins has made it clear he doesn’t want the government involved in RNZ’s editorial affairs.
David Seymour of the ACT party wanted an inquiry — and NZ First leader Winston Peters called for a Royal Commission into the media bias and manipulation.
Former National MP Nathan Guy told Newshub Nation this weekend “heads need to roll” at RNZ.
“If I was the broadcasting minister, I would want the chair in my office and to hold RNZ to account. I want timeframes. I want accountability because we just can’t afford to have our public broadcaster tell unfortunate mistruths to the public,” he said.
In the same discussion, Newsroom’s co-editor Mark Jennings reminded Guy that RNZ’s low-budget digital news transition happened under his National-led government which froze RNZ’s funding for almost a decade.
“This is what happens when you underfund an organisation for so long,” he said.
Jennings also said “trust in RNZ has been hammered by this” — and criticised RNZ chairman Dr Jim Mather for declining to be interviewed on Newshub Nation.
Earlier — under the headline Media shooting itself in the foot — Jennings said surveys have picked up a decline and trust and news media here.
“And the road back for the media just had a major speed bump,” he concluded.
How deep is the damage to trust?
The Press front page is dominated by the RNZ story. Image: The Press/RNZ Pacific
While the breach of editorial standards is clear, has there been an over-reaction to what may be the actions of just one employee, which took years to come to light?
Last week the think-tank Koi Tū: The Centre for Informed Futures at Auckland University hosted a timely “disinformation and media manipulation” workshop attended by executives and editors from most major media outlets.
It was arranged long before RNZs problems arose — but those ended up dominating discussion on this theme.
Among the participants was media consultant and commentator Peter Bale, who has previously worked overseas for Reuters, as well as The Financial Times and CNN.
“I really feel for RNZ in this, for the chief executive and everybody else there who does generally a great job. The issue of trust here is in this person’s relationship with their employer and their relationship with the facts.”
Bale is also the newsroom initiative leader at the International News Media Association, which promotes best practice in news and journalism publishing.
The exposure of the “inappropriate editing” undetected for so long has created the impression a lot of content is published online with no checking. That is sometimes the case when speed is a priority, but the vast majority of stuff does go past at least two eyes before publication.
“I think it is true also that editing has been diminished as a skill. But I don’t think it’s necessarily a failure of editing here but a failure of this person’s understanding of what their job is,” Bale told Mediawatch.
“You shouldn’t necessarily need to have a second or third pair of eyes when processing a Reuters story that’s already gone through multiple editors. The critical issue for RNZ is whether they took the initial complaints seriously enough,” he said.
‘Pro-Kremlin garbage’?
Peter Bale, editor of WikiTribune . . . “This person has inserted what are in some people’s views genuine talking points [about] the Russian view . . . But it was very ham-fisted.” Image: RNZ Pacific
There have been many reports in recent years about Russia seeding misinformation and disinformation abroad.
Last Tuesday, security and technology consultant Paul Buchanan told Morning Report that RNZ should be better prepared for authoritarian states seeking to mess with its news.
“This incident that prompted this investigation may or may not be just one individual who has certain opinions about the war between Russia and Ukraine. But it is possible that . . . stories were manipulated from abroad,” he said.
Back in March the acting Director-General of the SIS told Parliament: “States are trying, in a coercive disruptive and a covert way, to influence the behaviors of people in New Zealand and influencing their decision making”.
John Mackey named no nations at the time, but his GCSB counterpart Andrew Hampton told MPs research had shown Russia was the source of misinformation many Kiwis were consuming.
Is it really likely the Kremlin or its proxies are pushing propaganda into the news here? And if so, to what end?
“I think there’s been a little bit of ‘too florid’ language used about this. This person has inserted what are in some people’s views genuine talking points from those who . . . want to have expressed what the Russian view is. But it was very ham-fisted,” said Bale.
“There are ways to do this. You could have inserted the Russian perspective to highlight the fact that there is a different view about things like the Orange Revolution when the pro-Kremlin leader in Kyiv was overthrown,” he said.
Not necessarily ‘propaganda’ “I don’t think it is necessarily ‘Kremlin propaganda’ as it’s been described. It was just a misguided attempt to bring another perspective, I suspect, but it still represents a tremendous breach of trust,” he said.
“I write a weekly newsletter for The Spinoff about international news, and I try sometimes to show . . . there are other perspectives on these stories. Those things are legitimate to address — but not just surreptitiously squeeze into a story in some sort of perceived balance.
“I don’t think in this particular case that it is to do with the spread of disinformation or misinformation by Russia. I think this is a different set of problems. But I agree (there’s a) threat from the kind of chaos-driving techniques that Russia is particularly brilliant at. They’re very skilled at twisting stories . . . and I think we need to be ready for it,” he said.
The guest speaker at that Koi Tū event last Wednesday was Dr Joan Donovan, the research director of the Shorenstein center on Media and Politics at Harvard University in the US, where she researches and tracks the sources of misrepresentation and misinformation in the media, and the impact they have on public trust in media — and also how media can prepare for it.
At the point where 15 supplied news stories had been found to be “inappropriately edited” by RNZ, she took to Twitter to say: “This is wild. Fake news has reached new heights.”
Set against what we’ve seen in US politics — and about Russia and Ukraine — is it really that bad?
“Usually what you see is the spoofing of a website or a URL in order to look like you’re a certain outlet and distribute disinformation that way. It’s very unlikely that someone would go in and work a job and be editing articles without proper oversight,” said Donovan — who is also the co-author of recently published book, Meme Wars, The Untold Story of the Online Battles Upending Democracy.
“I think when it comes to one country, wanting to insert their views into another country — even though New Zealand is very small — it does track that this would be a way to influence a large group of people.
“But I don’t think if any of us know the degree to which this could be an international operation or not,” she told Mediawatch.
“What you learn is that their pattern is that they happen over and over and over again until a news agency or platform company figures out a mitigation tactic, whether it’s removing that link from search or writing critical press or debunking those stories.
“When I think about the fallout of it . . . using the legitimacy of RNZ in a parasitical kind of way and that legitimacy to spread propaganda is one of the most important pieces of this puzzle that we would need to explore more,” she said.
This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.
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