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this post was submitted on 26 Sep 2023
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There's a difference between state-funded and partisan state media. And technically all major newspapers in Canada get some funding from the government, for example.
They didn't label e.g. DW, which very much is state-fundend, not public, media. They're not even allowed to broadcast within Germany: Not only is it state TV, on top of that it's federal state TV. Broadcasting in Germany is prerogative of the states, the federation plain and simply doesn't get to do it.
Disclosing ownership/financing structures of media outlets is never a bad thing. DW is in every way whatsoever Germany's foreign propaganda outlet, it has some very clear editorial lines aligning it 110% to German foreign policy. That it also has better journalistic integrity than the BBC not to speak of Radio Liberty or any large privately-financed broadcaster is another topic.
State funding describes a conflict of interest, whether perceived or actual.
There's an ocean of difference between "funded by a democratic country and operated through an arm's length organization" and "funded by a totalitarian dictatorship to be an apparatus of the state".
-- Dril
Does that claim remove the existence of conflict of interest?