Breakfast Network can't go on Facebook
Site barred from operating on Net platforms: MDA
By Charissa Yong, The Straits Times, 14 Dec 2013
SOCIO-POLITICAL site Breakfast Network must not operate on any Internet platform, including Facebook or Twitter, as it has decided not to register with the Media Development Authority (MDA).
Making this clear yesterday, the regulator said in a media statement: "Should Breakfast Network Pte Ltd remain active as a company, it must not operate any iteration of www.breakfastnetwork.sg on other Internet platforms as doing so would contravene MDA's registration requirements."
This is because the website operates "via a corporate entity, which means there is greater possibility for foreign influence", and not because the site's content is an issue, said MDA.
The longstanding principle that politics must remain a matter "for Singapore and Singaporeans alone" is being upheld by requiring the website to register, the MDA added, and does not depart from Singapore's Internet regulatory framework.
Breakfast Network had announced on Monday it would not be registering under a class licensing Act. It was requested to do so by MDA on Nov 26. Three days later, its founder Bertha Henson asked MDA if the forms could be changed, but it replied that the forms were final.
In a Facebook post on Tuesday, the same day MDA told it to shut down, Breakfast Network cited reasons why it did not register. This included the need for voluntary contributors to be named in the registration forms.
MDA yesterday clarified that this was false. Instead, it was "pro bono editorial team members" who had to be listed if they were responsible for, or involved in, running and managing the site. It had informed Ms Henson of this on Dec 6.
On the same day, in response to her request for an extra month, MDA extended the registration deadline by a week to Dec 17, it revealed yesterday in an account of how events had unfolded.
The next day, Ms Henson informed MDA she would shut down the site. In a Facebook post about two hours after yesterday's MDA statement, Ms Henson said Breakfast Network would be suspending its Facebook page for now, to comply with the law.
Breakfast Network must close after not registering: MDA
By Charissa Yong, The Straits Times, 11 Dec 2013
By Charissa Yong, The Straits Times, 11 Dec 2013
SOCIO-POLITICAL website Breakfast Network must shut down since it has decided not to register, the Media Development Authority (MDA) said yesterday.
"Since Breakfast Network has decided not to submit the registration form, and will therefore not be complying with the registration notification, MDA will require that Breakfast Network cease its online service," a spokesman for the media regulator said in a statement.
"Since Breakfast Network has decided not to submit the registration form, and will therefore not be complying with the registration notification, MDA will require that Breakfast Network cease its online service," a spokesman for the media regulator said in a statement.
The regulator had set Dec 17 as the deadline for the eight-month-old site to register under the Broadcasting (Class Licence) Notification.
This states that an Internet content provider "engaged in the propagation, promotion or discussion of political issues relating to Singapore" will need to register with the MDA.
Breakfast Network also had to undertake not to receive foreign funding, in a move to guard against foreign influence on Singapore politics through the manipulation of local media platforms.
But in a post on Monday night, the site's owner, shareholder and editor Bertha Henson announced that she would be suspending the website's operations. Contributors will return to blogging and posting on Facebook.
Lawyers and business people had described the registration forms as "onerous", she said. "The demand to register - or else - has created a wrinkle in our barely formed plans to become a sustainable and professional outfit. Therefore, we have decided to suspend operations until we have re-strategised or at least till the amendments to the Broadcasting Act are unveiled."
Since yesterday, all Breakfast Network content had been replaced with a notice saying "kitchen closed".
In a post on Facebook later, Ms Henson pointed to "key changes" in the registration forms she was given, compared with the ones available on the MDA website. These included having to list anyone, even volunteer contributors, involved in managing or running Breakfast Network, instead of only executive committee and editorial team members.
Another sticking point was that the site would have had to keep all records and data related to it, and submit these to the MDA "when required".
The MDA said registration is not intended to crimp the growth of any media outfit, and registered sites could still receive bona fide commercial revenue, including from foreign advertisers.
"This process will not in any way affect what registered sites can publish on their websites," it said in reply to Straits Times queries.