INFORMATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS STATEMENT
(to be presented at the "Uses and Abuses of the Language of Human
Rights" next5minutes4 panel in Amsterdam, Sept. 14th)


Oleg Kireev



Last year a famous film director Lars von Trier published a documentary cinema 
manifesto which defines rules for the documentary cinema making. This rules allow to 
avoid manipulation in editing, in filming etc., and to present the object with maximal 
fullness.

In the age of proceeding infowar - which the World-Information.org site had dedicated 
brilliant materials to - we need clear rules concerning making and delivery of 
information. These will be rules defining an ethics of an information exchange. 
Activists, journalists and media workers who want to oppose informational noise and 
falsifications will take responsibility in following these rules when producing or 
delivering information. These rules will become a Charter for the informational human 
rights. They will not only formulate professional ethics of media-workers but will 
also give an information consumer an idea of a quality information which he has right 
to demand. These rules have to be compiled without any reservations about the 
relativity and subjectivity of ethical demands or about the interpretation 
subjectivity, and published. For sure, they will stay open for further discussions and 
corrections, but will become a basis for an informational solidarity.
 
Herewith I suggest several basic formulas for informational human rights.


1.      When producing information, an informer gives all the present factual datas 
with maximal precision.

2.      When transmitting an information, an informer doesn't change anything nor add 
anything. When there're several contradictory sources an informer delivers all factual 
datas with source indication.

3.      An informer doesn't create informational cases himself. If information is 
produced by a participant of an action or an event, then he "forgets" about his 
participation when producing an information.

4.      Information has to be delivered with minimum of generalizations, therefore an 
informer also "forgets" his analytical opinions (for instance those concerning causes 
and consequences of an event) and tells them separately from an immediate information.

5.      Information has to be strictly tied in time to the event.

6.      Any wrong information has to be refuted. 

7.      Any superfluous, unreliable or not-in-time information has to be qualified as 
an informational noise. An informational noise producer is as hostile as a 
manufactured information producer.


We share the point of view that information is the highest value of contemporary 
society. 
An agreement about common informational principles will allow us to elaborate a 
perception of information which corresponds to its value.

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