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Clive Palmer and Kerry Stokes paper rapped for spreading Covid vaccine misinformation | Amanda Meade

Stokes hired Cronin as editor-in-chief of West Australian Newspapers after he bought the paper in 2008. After the interview aired – and Weekly Beast heard it in full – we noticed it had been deleted from the 6PR website. A few days later Cronin returned to the airways to clarify, correct and apologise to Stokes. The original interview was reposted with the offending material edited out. We can’t repeat the potentially defamatory part of Cronin’s interview but we can tell you he said he was worried about concentration of media ownership, pointing to Stokes owning the West Australian, the Sunday Times, PerthNow and the Seven network, on top of his regional and suburban assets.

Clive Palmer and Kerry Stokes paper rapped for spreading Covid vaccine misinformation

Clive Palmer and Kerry Stokes paper rapped for spreading Covid vaccine misinformation Amanda Meade © Provided by The Guardian Photograph: Dan Peled/AAP The mining magnate Clive Palmer has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on newspaper ads attacking his opponents and making false claims about Australia’s Covid-19 vaccination program. The Australian Press Council, which monitors newspaper standards, has so far been silent about this potentially dangerous spreading of misinformation. But now the Independent Media Council, a press-council equivalent for Kerry Stokes’ stable of newspapers, has stepped up and criticised the West Australian, upholding a complaint against it for publishing a full-page advertisement by Palmer criticising the safety and legality of the Covid vaccination program, which contained factual inaccuracies it deemed unfair and “serious errors”, because they were “likely to undermine public confidence” in the program.

Facebook in Australia: What happened after news was blocked?

BBC News By Reality Check and BBC Monitoring BBC News image copyrightGetty Images Critics of Facebook say the company s ban on news appearing on its platform in Australia has made it more difficult for people to access reliable sources - and increased the influence of bad and misleading information. Unintended consequences It quickly became clear that one effect of the tech giant s move was that in addition to news providers, emergency services were also being blocked. Some Australian government health-department and emergency-services pages found that their Facebook accounts had been affected. They were later restored after Facebook was notified. The DFES Page was impacted by this morning’s changes to #Facebook. After working with the team at Facebook, DFES page visibility has been restored and we are able to continue providing the WA community with vital emergency information. #Phewpic.twitter.com/2Qvp5c4xmM DFES (@dfes wa) February 18, 2021

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