Shield laws
shield laws
Shield laws.
In the United States, the reporter's privilege protects journalists from being compelled to testify about confidential sources. The Department of Justice also has guidelines regulating the use of subpoenas against reporters.
the 1st Amendment guarantee of the free exchange of ideas
A law that protects journalists from being compelled to reveal confidential sources of information
they can reveal how individuals experiencing historical events actually reacted
they can reveal how individuals experiencing historical events actually reacted
They can reveal how individuals experiencing historical events actually reacted. (APEX)
A good reporter should, first and most importantly, know how to listen and to observe. Second, a reporter needs to be curious about people and topics. Third, a reporter must be able to write, without bias or opinion (unless doing an opinion piece). Reporters must follow the ethics of journalism even if those convictions cause discomfort or inconvenience. Many reporters have gone to jail rather than to reveal a source, for example. Thus, reporters must also be confidants to their sources in a sense.
A law that protects journalists from being compelled to reveal confidential sources of information
Can"t reveal my sources but it turns out it was 4,500 Nautical Miles one way.
A qualitative test will reveal a person's chance of having a virus. Usually, the results only detect a small chance of a person getting sick.
Two ways to write an analogy for divulge:divulge : reveal - conceal : hidedivulge is to reveal as conceal is to hide