Throughout 2010 whistleblower website WikiLeaks and its founder Julian Assange were making headlines with the release of classified documents. Both the leaks and the controversy surrounding Assange have been covered extensively by the media.
For the first On the Media discussion of the year we are going to be putting the spotlight on the media and asking what the WikiLeaks operation and the media coverage of it tells us about the press.
How have journalists responded to this new kid on the block? The future will no doubt see the emergence of similar organisations, but what impact will this have on the culture of journalism? How will the media adapt and how will this currently uncomfortable relationship develop?
Chaired  by Richard Gizbert, presenter of The Listening Post on Al Jazeera  English.
David Aaronovitch, writer, broadcaster,  commentator and regular columnist for The Times;
Mark  Stephens, media lawyer with Finers Stephens Innocent and Julian  Assange's solicitor;
Ian Katz, deputy editor of the Guardian;
Gavin  MacFayden, director of the Centre for Investigative Journalism.
In association with the BBC College of Journalism.

 
 
 
 







 
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